To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-10-04

Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-10-04 page 1

WEE U Y OH 0 nn 4 nnirt filth 0 RNAL VOLUME XXXIX. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, OCT OBEK 4, 1848. NUMBER 5. PUBLISIIKL) KVKKY WEDNESDAY MOltNINU BY TIIIULL & HEED. Jfficom the Journal Building, south eh.it corner of High streotand Sugar alley. VM. B. THHAIX AND HF.NKY KF.KD, Editors. T K M rj : Turin DoM.Aitf rr.n annum, which may be discharged by tho payment of Two Doi.laus in advance, and froo of pontage, or of per contage to Agoiits or Collectors. The Journal also published Dmly nnd Tri-Weekly du in the year; Daily, por Biiniini, 7 ; Tri-Weckly, 4. MONDAY llVl'NINO, HI'IM'EMHIill IN, 1H4H. The Silence Hrokcn Col. Wellor tolling the story of hit Iteftalcnllont Any quantity ol I'liuns One Truth. A few days since, in liii own county of Butler, Col. John 11. Well it attempted an explanation of his affairs as Fund Commissioner of that county, lln speech is reported by Col. Charles II. ilrough, and by hi in published in tho Cincinnati Enquirer, from whence it it copied into thu Statesman. The slate-, nienls of Cut. Weller arc mere broad assertions, made upon his own testimony, and nocoinptinied by no prooi of any kind ; and wo are now about to take them up and exhibit the in in their own liyhtand in that of the laws of tho Htntct promising that, in thii serious examination, wo have not thu slightest desiro to do more or less than equal and exact justice to one who stniids o high in tho estimation and affections of his party in tho State, and who so fully illustrates llie glory of Democratic principles as exemplified by Locofuco i nrnclicc. I Wo shall jrivo tho whole of Mr. Brough'i report of Col. Weller 's explanation, that wo may not he charged with garbling the text, or doing injustice to the argument, and, being anxious to study brevity, wo hull take up the declarations of the candidate seriatim, intermingling them with our own comments or proof; and first: ColW. said," that as one of the Fund Commissioners of Butler county, he had been charged with the county's proportion ol the Surplus Revenue. That thiij were required to loan this fund out in such a way as to produce interest, and were charged with interest whether they made the fund produce it or not." This is not truo. By virtue of ait act of the Legislature of 1H42-I1, entitled " an to provide fot the payment of tho doiiiurttic creditors of the Htnte of Ohio," Ohio fjtat., vol. 41, lec. 7, it is provided, "that all pay mints of money or bonds received by the Fund Commissioners of any county, or collected by them, shall not lie re-loaned, but shall be retained Inj them, to he paid in'o the State Treasury," 0,-c. By a subsequent section of the saiuo act it is provided, " that all moneys, bonds or certificates in the hinds of tho Fund Commissioner of any county under this act, and required to be paid into the Bute Treasury, shall be hy said Fund Commiisiontrs paid ocer to the County Treasurer on or before the first day of December in each year, to bo by him paid to the Treasurer of State." So that, instead of being 11 required to loon this fund in such a way as to produce interest," the commissioners were eiprtssly prohibited from loaning it at all, and were required to pay it over to tho County Treasurer. Col. W. continues to sny, " that it was loaned out, on good lawful security to the county of Butler (10, 000 tho residue to some sixty-five persons." At regards tho value of the securities which were taken, Col. Weller may perhaps be a competent judge, but, although he has been culled upon by every legal means of suasion to disclose what those securities are, he has steadily resisted such disclosure, and now stands justly chargeable with a contempt for having disobeyed the express orders of a court of justice in that behalf. The securities, bonds, notes, mortgages whatever they may be, arc in his hands. In this was also broken an ni press provision ol the uivi of tho Stale -tho law of lIU, which requires that the book, funds, papers, notes, mortgages, fcc , be handed by tho Fund Commissioners over to the l.uuntj Auditor. Col. W. says further: "That as the payments of interest and parliitl payments of principal were made, the Commissioners thought fit to loan the proceeds to ono another, when no one else offered, seeing they were required to make interest upon it. It will bu seen by reference to the extracts from the laws quoted above, that the Fund Commissioners being required to pay over to the Treasurer all moneys, both of principal and interest, as fast as they were collected, they were not only not required to make interest, but were prohibited from io doing ; and certainly had (hey been so required, no man can for a moment believe that in the county of Butler, money has been ever so much of & drug in tho market that the members of a board of Fund Commissioners would be obliged to loan their trust fund to unu another," because " no one else offered " to receive it. By tho way, this division of the funds between the members of the board this loaning to ono another, is a peculiarly new and rich method of Locofuco financiering,, and saves to the public ollicer an immense amount of labor in selecting the proper persons to become debtors of the fund. 11 He says : " That he had borrowed some portion of this money every dollar of which was amply si-cured by mortgage upon real estate, winch no man, acquainted with tho valuo of property, would hesitate to pronounce an abundant security." The amount borrowed by Col. Wilier of this fund, is stated at eleven thousand dollars, and this statement has never been contradicted. By an order passed by the Fund Commissioners of the Slate, and binding in its e fleet upon those of counties, it is expressly provided that not more than one thousand dollars ol the surplus revenue should be loaned to any one person This has been violated by this sworn ollicer of tho law. Furthermore, by the act "providing for the distribution and investment of tins Stale's proportion of the surplus revenue," passed Marrh !M, l'.'7, it is provided th.it the Commissioners shall, on making a loan, require and lake from the applicant a bond, the pay ment of which v. hill be secured by a mortgage on unencumbered real est ale, of an estimated value doubli in amount to tho sum loaned, or other adequate secu rity, conditioned for the payment of tho interest semi annually in advance, and of the principal sum so bor rowed, from lime to lime, as the same may come due This provision of tho taw has not been complied with, and tho whole story of the ample security ol the lund by niorgage, is a falsehood front beginning to end When Col. Weller, or Ins co Commissioner made the loan to himself, there was no bond and mortgage taken as is required by law the mortgage was execu ted and put upon record privately, after his nomination for Governor. The mortgage was not for double the amount, nor upon property of twice the value il was for eleven thousand dollars, and upon properly nut worth more than half that sum. It was not upon 11 unencumbered real estate," but upon properly already tied up by liens and judgments to nearly or quite its value. Upon this subject, the Hamilton Intelligencer ot thu Jlsi says: We may tell 4 tale about tho farm that bo (Col. Weller) mortgaged to secure the surplus fund, which was sold last (Sat unlay, to satisfy an execution in fa tor of the minor ehildren whote guardian he teat, and tchost Monty kr squandered," Whether the mortgage was " conditioned for the payment of the interest, semi-annually" or not, no interest has ever been paid, and there has accumulated, besides the original sum, an amount of interest upon this and other moneys, now in Ins hands as follows t Interest in 'Mi $t,Mi'.J ?4 Do. 1p;I7 luM H would dread the most to have this matter legally ascertained and settled." Ho then reiterates some of his previous falsehoods, and closes by an appeal to the internal evidence of his hearers: "Ho would repeat that the payment was amply secured, and the county would lose not a cent on account of it. Ho had nothing to keep back no thing ho was ashamed or afraid his fellow-ciliacm should know. Ho had lived in that community, man and boy, twenty-two years, and they could judge whether he was chargeable with any thing incompatible with tho character of an honest man." Wo have neither time nor space, at this moment, to comment upon the sickening detail of rascality and mendacity, by a sworn ollicer of llio law, and a candidate for a respectable and a responsible oflico. The exigencies of his profession may occasionally enforce upon the hunter the task of pursuing a noisome and unclean animal, but when no longer prompted by ne cessity, he will gladly desist from a labor so irksome and profitless. We have planted facts by tho side of fictions placed the violated law by the side of the confessions of tho offender and have been enabled to show the candidate of a great party fir n hiirh oflico, in tho unenviable position, not merely of a public de faulter and cheat, but of a bold, open and public teller of falsehoods. Wo leavo him for to-day : but we have not dune with him. Thoy Couid'ut ruise a General At Dayton they had Col. Weller, Col. Morgan, Co, Brough, and Col. Medary. Shade of Boanerges Brim stone ! What eternal lots of flood wood heroes ! How tiWimety-ininded are these Licofocos ! Not one but has a handle to his namo " as long as Count de Grasses queue." Terrible aro they as Teddy the Tempestuous when freshly baptized in Donnybrook poteen, and formidable as Bombastus Furioso in his most ram pageous paroxysms. But they could nt raise a Gene ral! They might have bre vetted Weller, it is true, and given him the title of 11 Gkkkhal Defalcation," and as they did'nt see fit to do il, we will undcrUke tho job. Be it therefore understood, that in and by the power resting in us, that the name, style and tille of the gallant money borrower of Butter, be, and it is hereby changed to that of Gknkiul Defalcation. TLi:si)AV YEN ING, Swntunibor 118. I Total tjCl.Mo Wi Which has been paid over In the Treasury of the Stale by Butler comity, out of Us otrn funds, in default of any payments by the delinquent fund commissioners.He closes his statement as follows : " That he might have advoided suit on account of this matter, having preferred to turn over the books and make payment of the sum which might be ascertained to be due, but inasmuch as some misunderstanding and (LT The Government in France has invented a species of moveable barricade, (o bo used in those fights which take place in the streets. It is composed of a heavy timber construction, coaled with iron, and mounted upon wheels. We mention this fur the purpose of suggesting to our Committer or Pinnc Safety, upon which is soon to devolve the cares of a 1'hovimo al GovKUHMKHT, the propriety of preparing similar machinery to bo used when the revolutionary hostilities of Ohio shall commence here at the scat of government. What a formidahle addition In aur peace establishment would be one of these barricades, posted, say somewhere in High street, and defended by our member of the Committee, armed with thai formidable cudgel, by tho uso of which he has gained such a world-wide renown ! It would be a perfect imitation of Capt. Uragg's battery. C'J Oen Taylor says that he is a Whig. John Van Buren thinks that Gen. Taylor has no principles. Which knows the most about it? The Free Soil folks think that Van Buren is likely to be the best informed. The Whigs beg leave to doubt the superiority of John's information. The Free Soil folks think that the Whigs aro very wrong in that. When we meet a man who tells us that he is a Whig, we have no difficulty in forming an opinion as to Ins political principles. Gen. Taylor tells the people of thu United States that ho is a Whig, and there are men who claim to be Whigs idle enough to inquire what he means by it. lie means that he is a Whig. A Nick Dhtisctio. Tho "free speech " champions find it " hard sledding " to get over Mr. Van Buren 'a canting vote as ('resident of the Senate in favor of tho bill authorizing postmasters to sift out "free speech " incendiarism from the mails, and to destroy or to suppress it. They say that he only gave his casting vote in favor of its engrossment fur a third reading being careful to forget that if his vote had been the other way, it would hare killed the bill nt that stage of its progissas effectually as if it had been voted down on its third reading. fjj One thing is certain, and even the Lncofocos musl acknowledge it: Wlien Gen. Ford does break that long silence which is so irksome to tho Loco-focos, ho will TKi.t, tiik thu r il. That was what Juhn B. Weller dare not do. When he broke the " expres sive, silence " which ho has so long observed, he broke it wilhiW'rAiW. They Lent it to One Another t Those two wise and faithful functionaries, to whom was entrusted the keeping of the Surplus Revenue Fund in Butler county, discharged their duties, by loaning the fund to each other ! They thought that the interests of tho Stulo and County would be best subserved, by dividing the money between them! What a view Ibis presents of the beauties of Locofuco ollico holding ! Cauiiv Htu oi:t axii tnnv urn! The Cincinnati F.uquirer thinks that the Butler county Colonel will get beat. The editor begins to leel that the odor of defalcation U too strong to be tolerated by tho people. He says : The result will be that Mr. Ford will receive the votes of most ol tlicauti Taylor Whigs on the Reserve and throughout Dm Stale; tho votes of most of tho Abolitionists, siid the votes of most of the Taylor men throughout tlie State all the elements of opposition to the Democracy uniting on him, On theae account bis dunces of success would seem to be belter than Mr. llmlcy's or Mr- He lib's, previous to their respective elections. Another Locofuco Urcnkdown. Tho Dayton Journal of Friday, thus notice the grand affair at the celebration of the anniversary of the battle of Monterey at that place, the day before. This was intended to 1h the great movement of the season. It was advertised that Gen. Butter would certainly be on the spot, and of course everybody was pxjH'otfd to come and see linn. But (ten. Butler did not come, i.-iilier did everybody; and although the leaders exHcird Hie former, they must have been somewhat sluf ified at the latter. The speeches were made in the u ual form by Col, Weller, Cot, Allen, Col. Brough and COL. Medary. The Grand "Ntnle Mna Meeting 1" About six o'clock, on Wednesday cveuing.thc masses were discovered to be in muimn. Two strangers, who rested under strong suspicion of having come a long distance lo see K.n. Butler, put up at Swavme's Hotel, and about (ho a mm hour Citixen Simuiedary registered It it name at the Vorheea House. Later in Iho evening it was reported that tho Hon. Win. Sawyer was in town, but diligent search be inn instituted for him at all the principal Hotels Uy thu Chairman of the " Committee nf I'uhlio Safely," he could not be found, and was supposed to be out making contracts for sausages. The next arrival was a large rubicund gentleman who dressed in black, and wore a little leg. horn hat in the shspo of a dice box. II seemed to be n holly unconscious that he was an object of inter est to any one, and did not discover Ins own greatness till ho was inlormed, before going to bed, that he had been registered by S"iue wag as Gen. William O But b r, and was 11 Iho observed of all observers " during the evening. Next morning, however, the Grand Mass Meeting of the Democracy of Ohio, began to assemble m car neat. From every direction, but principally from the South and West, they poured into the town, in dele, gallons of every conceivable sue, from a man and his dog on font, up to 1 1 hi principal procession, winch, as it moved throiljll Third street, numliered (Airiyntns wagons, carnages and buggies, a few horsemen and two bands of musin. Betwern III siid II o'elu-k, Col. Weller took the stand he's in tho habit of taking ihimrs and began his speech. At no lime during its delivery, which oc. copied till half alter 1U o'clock, was there more than I OU0 persons on the gmund. In this estimate of the numbers present, Wings and Democrats seemed to bo perfectly agreed ! Oj iktiti. CorrasATioB. The Lncofoco papers have a great deal to say about Gen. Caas' agency in eeimittf the ratification of the Quintuple Treaty. While, however, we are willing In give him dun credit lor that piece ol diplomacy, we Ihmk he evinced great er surev,iiness ami skill in securing the ratification that his Gross Frauds upon the Teopie Since the exhibition of tho two several lives of General Cass, both Issued at the same office, printed with the same type, composed by the same hands and circulated by the saino committee, the ono intended to give a Northern and the other a Southern aspect to the Michigan luminary, tho Locofuco prints have been extremely busy in inculcating upon tho public the charge that the Whigs have been equally fraudulent in their multitudiuouH lives of General Taylor. The editor of the Washington Union labors through a nightmare of three mortal columns, in which, for the purpose of making the number ns huge as possible, he calls every newspaper biographical sketch a "life," and charges fraud to tho right and left, upon every Whig editor who has had the impudence to spoak well of General Taylor in his columns. After overhauling a great variety of these, from tho Toledo Blade, Boston Atlas, Cincinnati Gazette, &c, and from the letters of It. C. Schenck, Caleb B. Smith, and others, be says: " In addition to these, there are now in circulation fourteen different lives of General Taylor." He says: " His lives in the German and French languages we ae not able to decypher." Now, General Taylor's life, " in the German," has been deciphered. Wu have seen, read, and presented it lo our readers, and a dirtier Locofuco production never emanated even from the Statesman office, or was put in circulation by a profligate public defaulter on his stumping expeditions. Its author dure not own the infamous progeny its printer conceals his nnmo it is put in circulation in secret, by base and knavish men, for wicked and infamous purposes. Let the editor of Iho Globo nittko the requisition on us, and wo will sond him the proof, that he can " decypher." Tiik Fhaui) Wouks Wku.. Gen. Cass' two lives, issued from the Globe office, the Northern life and the Southern life, the Wilmot Proviso life and the anti-Wilmot Proviso life, are creating a strong excitement in Virginia; old Democrats, in view of (his fraud, are : turning from Cass as they would turn from a convict. They think, and justly too, that an attempt to swindle men out of their votes is no belter than an attempt to . swindle them out of their purse, Ono of tho Wnig electors in Virginia, as soon as he learned the fuels in regard to thune two lives, ordered leu thousand copies for his own uso five thousand of the Northern or Wilmot Proviso life, and live thousand of Iho Southern or anti- Wilmot Proviso life. More upon Gen, Cass Temperance. We look upon it as a matter of no laomenl whether Gen. Cass was all Ins life a strict temperance man or not. Tho question is, has he not been a hypocrite in al his te nie ranee professions. If he and bis friends had claimed nothing, no examination of his history upon that subject would have been necessary , but all tho world is interested in unmasking tho hollow pretentions of a hobby-riding claimant of sanctity to which he has no real right. The following, from the Detroit Advertiser, prenenls some new light upon the subject, and wo shall not be surprised if some of our friends exclaim in relation to this modern Falstaff, what the merry Prince Hal did of the ancient "What an inordinate quantity of sack !" The friends ot the Hero of the Canard are constantly presenting and urging his claims lo the suffrages of the people of iho United Stales, on the ground lhat he is now, and ever has been, a living monument of the utility of cm tire, abstinence from lite use of ardent spirits. That Gen C ana is a lemperute man at pre. neat, wo admit; but that Ac, or bis fritnds, made pretty free use of the ardent, when, as a Commissioner of Indian Affairs, he was negotiating a treaty witli the Sag-inaws, is evident from the following fuels found in Voucher No. GO, vol. 2, American State Papers, Indian All' urn, puge IHO, paid 4th January, le'4, by the United Stales on (he certificate of General Cass, liefer to the book, Mr. Free Press, and read as follows, viz: For the table furnished for the commissioners and officers of Iho Indian Derl. ment, and other persons, and Indiaimin-vited thereto, from the lid to the iJUtli of Sept , Inl'.f, amounting lo ii27 meals, at 7oc per meal , It!) gallons cogniac brandy and barrel y bur re Is rider , gallons L. P. Tennrilte wine and libJ. gallons fourth proof spirits , y iron bound casks , l!) gallons wine If gallons lime juice and keg 10 galloni) whiskey fj gallons gin and keg GI7 14 14 IWJ ",'lt 110 irv.i 50 w 00 4 00 108 Ot) o 00 10 00 u 00 Tiik Hitfai.o Convkktion. The history of mankind scarcely offers an example of an alliance like this the first of the Van Burens with the last of the Adams. We have believed that I here was a time and place for every thing under tho sun, but never be-dreamed tint an Adams could link his fate and fortune with the head of the House of Van Buren ; and (hot, loo, upon an anti-slavery iixue. If the gh'nt of the fat tier, or grandfather could rise from the graves of the deae, they would be a.ilounded at such degeneracy as this. Mugs County Telegraph. llnckinff Out in llttinilton County. The Locofocos of Cincinnati have become a little afraid to trust themselves in Ihe position which they took upon the apportionment. Having, doubtless, the assistance of some military gentlemen, lately relumed from the wars, whoso rtconnuiianres have been more scientific than any herelolore made, they have discovered themselves posted in a false position, having both flanks and Iheir rear badly exposed. The following xtract from a communication received in this city, hows an attempt at a retrograde movement, for the pur pose of occupying ground previously condemned in the war councils of the parly. After beating all the points if war over the aland which they had taken, arid sounding tho charge so ferociously, their sudden change of front, looks, to say the least, rather low priced : " But the Democracy cornered themselves in Ihe rebellion matter For iliey dared not carry out their own propositions, which they adopted at their conven- lion by a irreat majority. 1 liey declared Iliey would vole llie whole comity ticket as formerly, ''isregardmg the apportionment, and denounced any Democrat who liould not do Hi at same, as a traitor and no IJciuo. crat Since their convention, however, they have concluded to change front nn that subject, and it is now understood, and indeed published abroad to the faithful, that they may vote according to the apportion, ment law. Il was rather a short turn to make in the very face of the enemy, but they have done it." Goi.n Pens. Among the great variety ol inven tions for use and ornament, for which the ago is s re markable, and this country is so celebrated, there is no one whose great and apparent utility has brought it in. to more rapid and general uso than that of tho gold pen. He who writes, whether regularly or occasionally, cannot but experience the pleasure which arises from having constantly at hand a pen that never fails, never needs mending, that is ever ready and uniform. To the habitual writer, the accountant, the editor, the business man, they are almost indispensable, and to any one who is required to register in black and white his do'iigs or Ins thoughts, they are invaluable, 1 he one with which this is written, is one of a splendid irlment of every kind, variety and price, which we had the pleasure lo examine at Ihe store of Win. A Plait iV Co., in this city, a few days ago. (J J" We observe lhat it is announced in the Cmcin nali pipers that the Chairman of the Committee on Public Sifety, tho President of the lale Locofuco fix- lie in Columbus, the F.ditor of the Ohio Statesman, the Postmaster nf Cotuuihui, and the Citizen Hamme duy have all arrived in that city. We hopo lhat they may have a good time, and be returned to their re spective avocations, respecting friends and expecting families in peace. Tkc llr.Aiioi muv GumialCam has so little Militaiiv Fawk. Tho Locoficos in 110 proved, to their own satisfaction, thai General Harrison was fourteen miles from the field when the bittllo of the Thames was fought. Tltis is, doubtless, the reason why General Cass, who was his aid, failed to acquire any military fame. He was so faraway lhat ho could' nt be distinguiihtd A Tiiinn Pabtv Tnimrii In the sevrnlh Con gressional District, Illinois, Harris, a Locofuco slavery extensionisl, was elected to Congress by a majority of InG over Logan, a Whig freo territory man, which was done hy the third party giving KiG votes to their own candidate, who they knew they could not elect. QT We observe with pleasure, that the Cincinnati Globe, which is by far the mst influential of the Free Soil organs ol Ohm, docs not approvo nf Ihe movement made at the late Free Soil (.'.invention in cont'roversy bad taken place regarding ll.f books, he J" lte.. '1 ho documenls show lb - , 1 f , , , , pay, lur a numbi r of years, was five fold, via : preferred to have a I Iho facts legally ascertained and ( - . f . . . 1 , 3 As Governor of Michigan settled This story Is set at rest by the fact, that although the law of 184G expressly provided for Ihe delivery of books, papers and securities, over to tho proper officer, and although a suit in chancery has long been pending to enforce sui-b delivery, stilt it has never taken place, and ii now tho especial point of resistance by this ollicer who, at this moment, of all in the world, woo Superintendent uf Indian Alfairs. ....... . loot) Olhec rent, Ae I MM Captain in llie Army ,, li-t) Ten Rations a day, at Wo ?,0 In addition to this, h drew a handsome per diem allowance aa Quartermaster, mileage, Ac , Ac , Ibua proving himscll to be a man of extraordinary skill in extracting the peoples' money from Ihe National I reas ury. Mbany Journal 174 What proportion nf the 41 gallons fourth proof spirits and the 10 gallons of whiskey wero manufactured at tfie distillery owned by the late Henry 1. Hunt nod Lewis Cass, and which was located just below the old May lot, and continued in operation until it was indicted as a nuisance, the coiunnsnioher does uol stale 111 his vouchor. Daro Lewis Cass or any gentleman conneclcd with him, deny that be was a partner Willi the lalo Henry 1. It unl to that distillery r vo wan lor a repiy. an uli settle 11. liouisiiinn. Tho Philadelphia North American publishes the fol lowing extract, received by a merchant of lhat city, from New Orleans. Knowing something of the source from which it comes, and knowing that no man is bet ter qualified to form a correct opunon, or more likely to express one lhat tuny be relied 011, than the writer .we copy the extract as follows : "New Oulkans, Sept G, Im-K " liouisiana is more ilian safe lor Taylor sho is certain Within the lust few days a comnlele chaniro has conic over tho apecl of things, and the blaze of enthusiasm burns brightly through the city and Ktuto. A new feature has presented ilsif in the forma-lion of Union Rough and Ready Clubs, entirely dis tinct from Ihe ward clubs, or ihe regular organization of the parly. They have Iheir origin among the " Democrats," and are formed exclusively of tho bone and smew ul our population, the working clas ses the people. There has been one formed in llie Second Muni. cipalily, which already numbers :ti)0 member, and an other in the third, whose organization I attended last Thursday uighi. Five unl of Ihe six Vice Presidents were Democrats, and Ihe meeting was uIiiiohI entirely composed ot working men mechanics, stevedores, long-nhore ineii, and (he like. "The Locol'ocos (I don't mean Democrats, for they art with us,) are completely sppalled. They have not Had 0110 respectatue ward meeting yet. iheir ranks are so much thinned by desertion lhat they are completely depressed, Their last gun has been spiked." Heller's Defence. The following specimen of machine verse was sent to us. It is not Ureiner's, though it was ground out to some tune ; neither is it very wttl, though it does up H titer pretty mil. We like il. It is highly moral in its tone, and goes against stealing as uugcnleel and dangerous. It it called The Nolilnquy nl General Ic Intention. ll'a fttniin U111 hiifi k't-p tnlkuia so, Ami try to ifi't tip ucli a Hllicr; We did'nt tUal the money! no, Wo ttorrutPtd it of osk anoDIkh. Tis wrong lo steal, and those tint do it Get pn imbed, siiro ; (lie re mn'l lie doubt on't : Then wltal's tlio ue lo leal, noil rue it, When wo could 110 lite county out on't f There miL'lit le borrowers lienides 'I'liev did'nt wxiit It irt"n than we did j 1 nlrtMi lised tlul Swart wout cli.q. And thought I'd try lo do as be did. 1 went lo Mexico In try And gut some glory to defend inoj But there I t ulnl. ..'r low or l.u'li, coutd'nt find no ont to tend ou. Rut public fund's another tliin?, And 1 and my otlictal brother To linger cah wn bad lull swuni M't Unt tt all to ont anothtr! Attrvtt at Munin'.R. An atrocious attempt to murder a colored woman, named Mary Davis, living in the rear of Gen. K Gale's Hotel, was made by a colored de per ado by the name of Lewis Clark, on Saturday evening, about D o'clock. He entered her house in tho dark and slabbed her as she lay in bed in some six or seven different places, severing the external jugular vein, and making several frightful incisions in the shoulders, breast and hinds. Dr. J. 8. Skinner was called immediately, and after checking the hnmiorrbage and applying suitable dressing, left Ihe patient in quite a comfortable s tuation. Clark has been arrested and is iu the bands of justice. . Fkiuiis vmn Pckdhyi.vama. The Lorofocos are already hoiting their banners in the Old Key Stone Stale, inscribed " Cass, Holler, and the Tanlfof '4!l." If Pennsylvania be deceived tins lime it will he her own fault, and she d rvca to inlfer lgan (int. (H" The Lncofocos fei 1 very bad over the idea that Gen. Taylor never gave a vote in tin life. Let them rest in peace, comforted with the consoling reflection thai if he had voted il would always have been against them. 3. Will perform in Columbus on Friday, the 0th of October, for one day only. Howes St, Go's irreat Unitod Minim ( !ircon nmbrnfon ih 1 largest troupe over organized, consisting of the most distinguished anil talented equestrian mid artists, both mala and lemale. hi addition to this highly celebrated company, is a troupe of AJno ileal Uedouiu Arabs. whoso performances have been the wonder and ilelijjlit nf all who hava witnuKsed their unapproachable acts. The public may be assured that tlicrie inmi aro no " counterfeit presentments," but the real uncivilized sons of thu desert, The lire at learn of cainelH. driven bv two nntivo Arabs. Tho groat Ktfyplian Unison Chariut, drawn by Twelve Heul Nvriiin Cninels. two of which are while ihe Sacred Albino Camels the first ami only ones ever irtioorted. A so lend id rnnrcscuUtiou of Onnnn Mab's Fairv ('buriol. drawn by a stud of Twelve Diminutive Rhetliind Ponies ilriven in hand by MAJOR STO'K.NS, Iho DWAUF. in Conveyance of en juvenile r.queKtrmn. Locomotive (ias will be used, bv which the whole eat ah. lisbinent will be lighted as bright m noomlny. AOimiiaiice iiox auu ni cis. l liiidreii nail price. Afternoon perfnimance at 'J. rWeiiiinr at 'lie above w ill icrt'orm at liellcl'onlniim Mombiv.Oct 2d. at Miirysville. Tuesday. ltd, Del iware. Wednesday 1th, Wor-thimf on, Thursd.ty, oth, and Circle. ville, Salunhv, 7th days f Oiiolinr. soplti ,'twwiVltd. n on fTi ly ui' iXFt 1 nTn TtH Dyseulerv, Dinrrham, Ac. J'oiilicety eund in a few hows. The tiraefeiibcrir Coiiuianv pledges itself to tho following lads: Ul. The firiicfeiiherir Ilysen :ery Synip will cure the Imen-1 cry, lliarrhtea, &,c, in twenty-lour hours. !id. A cure is warranted, no milter how bad the est no ; cren if the discbarui-sarc bloody and constant. 1 be moucv is mutant jy rfminocu 11 a cure is noi ine result, I housaiius ot 1 1 res have been saved by its use j m some instances where llie patient have been given up. lib. .Numerous testimonial)! aro on file at the Company's Olheo, which would natifv the inot increibiloue, A letter jimt received from Joicpli 1', I lail, Suffolk, a., contains the loiiowinu : 0 7 The Dysentery Syrup rures in every case." " Tfm same proof is daily corning in from every State in the I iiion. 'J 'Ins citraordinarv medicine should be reported to the moment any bid sMoptomM ar near. Seamen, Boatmen, Travelers, ami ail oilier should have a supply, us its timo-fy tife will save life. The Medical ('acuity are atdoninhed at its power; freely cniil'esHriL' tit it there is no other medicine al alt to bo compared with it TIIK CHIIJiliCN'S PANACF.A, iseijii ill v eltiracimiK in all the bowel and summer cnmplnints ot children. 1N0 mutlicr or ptivftician should bo without it. The ii iicr.il ii'iitx lor Kraukhn coiiutv, aro I. N. WIIITIMi & IH M'I.V.TON, Columbus. The medicine nny lie had of Dr. J. II. Lewis, Wortbing-toit. aul UhondcK Ai l,e is. He) iioldidiuru;. sepl.t, CIIANCKKV NOTICK. I;U V! B. I). OUHK.,Sussiil).Oi!dim. William R.Chot-J wood, Hannah Chetwood. Jiuiilhari Itirtlelt, t's. Laac Ci. Oudeii. M iruarei Oadeii, Klua I lavton, Sally DavU n, Susan Hovil. William Itoyd, tJeoruiaiia HnrrodMnr'y Campbell, Kiualwili r'oMer.'CeorL'c f-'onter. Thomas It. C. Hay-ton, Aanm O. Hiyton. Jane Kerrian, William Kerrian, Amelia (i. flaylon, IVirt Irving. William (i. Immi, Ccorife Al. (g. den, r'ran'cis II. Olenlfill in Chuncerv. Ill the Court of Common p,. fr tb county of Franklin, and State of ( no. The said del'i-n.bititn nrc'hcrcby not died, that llie said Complain ml Invc tiled their bill of complaint in bind court, wherein they allege that prior to the year A. D , IliJI, the late Jonatbin Pivton, ul I ho Stale of Now Jersev, was sen. d of ihn undivided sfiventenn fifty-fourths fl7-M,) of lbs lollowinii deicnlied real eotale, Mtu.ite in said coiiuiy, to wit : the hi-eo ml uurlcr ot the first township 111 Ihe loth raritffl of I niled Slates Military lands, containing I .'SHI acres -lti.il Clint It. Hiyion. John Hiyton, Mary Williamson, 1 iconic .i. ivuen ami t mini It listen, were seued ol llie umlivnlcd remamiiitf part ul uil land as tenants in common with gnid Jonathan Dayton that an agreement was made bv and between said tenants in coinni"ii. lor ttie nartition ol said premises, wherebv llie said Jonathan Un ion was to have ami hold the tract of ,1 acres laid oil in the northeast cor ner of said section and also, lot So. I I, in the other part ot' said section, according to a plat of said land on record in inul county, in severalty a Ins share of said premises t tnd the said Kb as II. Haylim, Mary Williamson, John Djvtoti. rrancis 11. Utftien ami tieore M. Ojdon were lo liavo and hold the remaining part of said land in severalty aa their share of tho same. That in accordance) with said agreement, Ine parties (maid acreoiiieiit took possession and have field and enjoyed possession of said land each of their re-speclne parts nforenatd ) severalty, and ihe anid Jonathan Hayton, by Inn deed duly executed and delivered, conveyed all bis interest in that part of i;ml laud so partitioned lo bis said cotenaiits, to them in fee simple, but llie said cotenanls have hitherto wholly neglected anil refused to convey their interest in the pirt so set oil' to said Jonathan Dayton in severalty, aud tlio legal title lotto undivided thirly-sevan lift). fourths of saiil land remained in them in trust, navrr-tbelesa, for said Jon it linn Divlon. That tho said complainants are the owners by pure ha mo and descent of the interest of in id Jonathan iMyion in said lands, and said dclcmUnts are Ihe owners bv descent or nlherwue of the interest ol aid rnlennnta of iaid Jnnatban Davton in said land. And sain inn prays mat said defendants may be decreed to con- vey in said complainants all their interest in that part of said Und so partitioned to mtd Jonathan Dayton, u aforesaid, and also for genoral rohef Hy SMYTH ti 4t SPUAi.CK, seplli oww. Sols, for complainants. GKOIKiK TAYLUIt, adni'r ot John Harney, deceased, es. H.irney, widow of said John tiirnev, Ira and Kmily Alidtbv, Joel ami Caroline Walling, William and Sarah Ann llntf. Ildmund and Minerva I.11111, Lucas and Julia McComb, John II, and Win. II. Harney r'ranklm county Common I'leas I'rlMon to Mill land. "Notice is hereby given to the above named defendants, widow and heirs oi'lhe late John Harney, due d, that at the May term, llllll. of the r ranklm county Common I'leas, Ohio, mid administrator filed Ins petition tho object and prayer of which is to obtain an order, Are., at Ihe neit term of the said court fertile sale of the following real entitle, of w hich llie snul John Harney duel scitcd. ni so much thereof aa may be necessary to pay Ihe debts of Bu decedent, in wit : la-lols in the town of Worlhincton, in said f ranklin county, numharad liKOIttiK TAYLOR, leplb Iww. Adm'rol John Harnev, dee d. IM THAU FKMAI.K HCH1NAHV. TIIK Winter Term ul' the J'utnam f emale Seminary will commence Wednesday, Oclobor4Mi, aud will continue 2j weeks. i'he tlcsign of this Institution, in its nresent oriraniiation. is to eluvale the itandard nf Female education. It lias a I'riumry, Academic and Collejriale Department. Through its excellent 1'rincinal. Instructerpsflea and Professors, it provides thorough and solid instruction for the various stages and branchy of education deemed requisite to the formation of 11 useful, accomplished Chrbdiaii character. 1 ne mil ionei(iaie course occupies four years, and has, it is behoved, a wider nuigo of studies, and a more thorough nyt,tem o instruction, than any similnr institution in iho State ) embracing, not only tho Kngludi branches taught in our best Collc-ues, but also the Lalut und Cermaii languages, for which there is no extra cliaruo. Young Indies, however, who du not wish toMndy the Ian-guff pes, have every facility for pursuing tb Knglish branches, which is furnished by any Kcinale Seminary. Parents, who wish to give their daughters 1111 accomplished and thorough education, ara nssured that tho very best advantages for this purpose nre tiere enjoyed nud that no pains will he spared, by coiriiietcnt and ellicient teachers, lo ren der the situation of the young ludies who may resort to the iiiMiriinoii, m tlie higlioHt degree pleasant and conducive to their mental and moral improvement. 1 tie location is deliL'fitlut, tlio bmhting ample, the acenra- modatioris excellent, und tho facilities for nuiet aud rclirsd study such as are rarely furnndmd. 1 ne expenses are put al trie lowest possible rales, t or Hoard, it hint:, and u separate mom for every two pupils. lighted and warmed, (while the season requires it.) so as to be a convenient and retired study, the charges aro $- per week for the Winter term, and Vl.7.r) tor the Summer term. Those who choonc to do their own washing will ba allowed a deduction of 2j cts. per week. 1 l'l 1 ILM. Winter Term gi (rt) Summer Term U DO i:xtua ktiuih:. Music with the use of the 1'imio, (per year.).., 30 00 (Instruction in vocal music to all pupils, gratis.) Hrawing and painting, (per year,) 15 Of) r'rench, Ii tX) Latin ami Cerman, ns they are embraced in tlio regular course, no charge. Tuition in the Primary Department, per year,). 10 00 for further particulars, iiiipiirieH may be made nf the Principal, Miss M. Cone, or any of the uriileriLned Trus tees of the Institution. A. KIN(;sm;iiY, resident TKUSTKKS. Solomon Srtmois, Ai.va Hltkinuaam, J. C. GlTHHlt:, C. C. L'oav hits, C. P. Bf( KINOIl KM. A. A. fir-niniK, Sec'v. Kcl'erencoit Dr. Smith. Prei't Murietta CoIIcpo : Drs. Slown und Allen, l.nue Seminary Itcv. Cooiluinn, Cincinnati t Hcv. W. 11. Itcccher. Kuclid ; Hon. K. Lane, San dusky Cilyt Hev. II. I.. Hitchcock, Columbus; Hcv. V, H. Hone, Cbillicotbu; Huv. 11. Little, Madison, U. sep!) wifw. W LMMCYAN hliWx LlTTTiL GJCl CIM'IMVVn. OHIO, ( Inrorparatrd trith Colleuttr pmrtr and privileges.) rpHK hall term of thin luMitulinn will commence on the 1. '.'Dili of Aiiimt, nnil continue twenty-two weeks. Tho' Students are received nt any tune, yet the interest nf all concerned remlprs it very de nimble that iliey should be in attendance at early as practicable. It is presumed nothing need lie said of thu character of ibis Intditution, further than lo slate that it went into operation six years since in a rented dwelling, wilh nighleen pupils that its patronage lias been coimlantlv find regularly increamiig tn.til the present time that during the l;it MCiodon it enrolled -li.' pupils I nun ionic twelve diU'crciit States has purchased and now occupies I lie lale reeideneo of H. Starr. Km., one of the moat elevated, central, airy, nud every way desirable locations in tho city and has 11 devoted arid ludelhtiguhle Faculty, ful y adequate in number, and competent to impart instruction in all the rejiulnr and ornamental branches. The entire eiocntes of a hoarding pupil per term of '21 weeks, will vary between 51" and J? according to llie grade of regular studies punned, nud the number of orna mental branches taken Application lorliirther information or for niluiishioii, msv be made to the iindeoiiiued, either personally or by letter. P. It Wl LHKK, Pres't. JV II. jo scrtanan or sectional prejudice nre allowed to wound the Ice 1 1 tins, or disturb the hurmonv of those who here nook instruction. auul.r) V. Cin. (iaa. ooi,i:k i 1:11 a li: aoaui:.my, da vi o.n, ohio. rMIK next session of this Inhibition will commence on J Monday, Ihe Will o August. I he course of instruction u extensive, embracing all llie common und higher Knglish branches, Latin, ti reek, French nml (erriian latiuuat!cn, V ocal and Instrumental Music, and Drawing nnd l auding. Application lor sdmiMHion, or information, miv tie made to the Principal, K. L. Uaiinkv, or to either of the under signed trustees. SVMI'KI. roiutr.ll, ItORMtT U. S I1E.11K, Kliw uti) W.Daviks, It. W. Sii:i:i,k, I) Pllll.ira, Hit 11 A It l) (iKEhlT. july'Jj twdiV iinv, ECLECTIC MEDICAL l.NKTUTTE, r.Vf7A.Y.177. 070. rllti next Kail and WinterCourso of Lectures com men ces in this Institution on llie first Monday in Novem ber, and continues lour months, which is immediately alter luccecded by the Spring and Summer Sesmon, which also continues four mouths, A gratuitous preliminary courie commences on the first Mouthy in October, and continues one iiiouui. FACULTY. Tickets. D. L. Hill, M. D., Anatomy, and Operative Surgery, 510 00 L. K. Jones, M. I)., Materia Modica, The rape u lies, and llotanv, 10 (Nl J II Oliver.' M D.Chemistrv and Pharmacy. . Hi (HI W. Heiicli, M. D.. Surgery and Clinical Medicine, - 1U UU A. H. Ilalrnlge, M. D., Obstetrics and Disuuies of Women and Children, ... 10 00 J. K. Huchniian, M. I), Phyiiolngy. Institutes of. Medicine and Medical Jurisprudence, - - 10 00 T. V. Morrow, M, D,, Pathology, Theory and Practice of Medicine, 10 00 Matriculation 'Picket, 5.I I'senf Library, ft (radua-lion Fee, IO. Demonstrator's Ticket, '.V optional. One hundred dollars paid on or befure Ihe first Monday in JVo veinhcr next, will be received as payment in lull tor tho entire tuition of one student ihe Matriculation, Library, sod Dt inonslrator's Pecs excepted. Tim course of instruction embraces a full and thorough presentation nf the various departments of inadical science taught in tho leaning college of America, together with much additional milter, not imparted in any other institution, vis : recent and important discoveries in physiology bearing upon diagnom and practice j a more thorough and piactical system of Materia Mcdica and Pharmacy; and B reformed syilern nf practice, haocd upon extensive experience and scientific research. winch euables the practitioner belter to preserve the vital energies to discard llie use of mercurial medicines, nnd general depletion, and to treat with sncc ess many medicul and surgical cases, that bailies Ihe usual resources of medicine. Six or seven lectures and ex animations will tie given daily. Candidate! for graduation, in addition in Ihe preliminary timo nf study, must have at tended two rciiiilar collegiate courses of medical lectures, (the last o which must be in this Institute,) or one course alter one years' pnctice. The liif lilule was chartered in fV. The classes in attendance Upon the lectures have numliered as follows : llltd -ti.lll t llil-7, IIH7-U1, It is expected that in two or three years lis clasves will bo immng Ihe largeit m the United Stales. The collegiate edifice (corner of Court and Plum street.) mil Imi enlarged in HH'J, sufficient lor the reception of I" "lor Its Ml pupiU, Letters upon bu nines or soliciting information, mint be addrcsicd to the undersigned, port paid. iNoles of solvent Hanks, nf the States in which ihe students reside, will bo received 111 the payment of lues. Hoard may be obtaiued in Iho city at from l per week. T. V. MoltHOW, M. D , atij A jf .,(. Dean of the Faculty. For tlio Ohio State Ji-tirnul, Lenrrnl ( iims'i DMillcry M ssns. KniroKs : 1 have seen in both the Journal and Statesman, various allusiotia to a certain Ihttil-Ory, once owned by (ien. Lewis (' sb, al Detroit. If my memory is not murk at fault, (ien. Cass was tho reputed owner of a Distillery at lhat place, dow n to niioin ine year ivi, or furr aliout winch lime ho this city, recommending the nomination of a candidate 1 od it to a gentleman, now residing in the City of Co- for Governor, by thai party. A pHoviiivsT Invmtwknt. Mr. Aaron A Clark, of Portland, Me , who was unfortunately crowded I mm the whan into the river, and drowned, el the lato con 1I1 grit ion in Albany, took out a policy on his life for .o00( in New York, about two months since, also one for $'.ito0il, at a Huston ulliee, thu securing to j Ilia lamilv, consisting n a wife and four children, the , comfortable aunt of $7,000 at a cost uf less than gt'HI The above is an instance of the Item-fit arising from ihe system of Life Insurance which has of lale become so extensively resorted to. bee the sdvertise-ment of the Mutual Lift Inturnnrs Company, of New York, of which Mr. Chas. T. Wirt has received Iho agency for Ibis cily. Tint CoasTiTt'TtoitAi. Purron. The President of the United Htatcs, on enlerinji upon the duties of his oilier, is required to make oath as follows : " 1 do solemnly swear (or allirui) that 1 will faith fully executo the ollico of President n the United OlaieS, ailll Will, 10 ine ncm 01 oiy ei'iniy, prepcrve, protect and defend thu Constitution of the United 8lalcs." Tim P a kt v Pi ATioHat proposed by tho Lnoofocos to their candidate would require of llie President elect, an oalh something like this: 11 1 do solemnly swear lhat 1 will support Ihe doctrines of the Loco foco party, as declared 111 their late revelation at llalluuore." The former declares (Ien. Taylor's faith, the latter indicates llie practice of (ien. Cass. Wo iniiterslitod that Ihe Free 8oil" Convention held at Wilkesvtlle, Gallia county, on the Kith inat declined making noiiiiuaiinns, either for Congrcn llie Hiale LcirtsMuic, or lor county otlicera .Wrts lo. Itttgraph. The river is very low, and still has a dattntrtrd tendency. Larger boa Is ennT venture more, ' Nor liltle ones keep near shore. lumlnis, who converted it into a Hrcwery. That gen tleman can uoubllesa lurnisti the lacls, if he trill. An " Ol.ll 1 H HABITANT." A Frsnv Platiokh Here aw two planks from the Htill'ilo pUtl'orm, on which Mr. Van Huren and Mr. C. F. Adams are striving so hard to stand aidu by aide : 7'Ar.VrWr.irt War. ' It is due In tlie future lame, as well as tin present prosperity of Ibis great nation, that it lie triumph anil v siislniuetl "Mar- tin fan llurcn. The Mtitcan H'.ir Tho present war with Mexico is unconstitulinii.il in its origin, unjust in its character, and detestable in ils objects " Charles F..Id-sms. Iftbev did not hate each other loo cordially, Messrs. Van Ho re 11 and Adams could not look each oilier in the face without laughing at the ridiculous position they occupy before Ihe country. After this experi ment o tho " rree Hell party, we may expect bye. and live to see V nit for Foatr and John I. Unit stand ing upon the same plailoruis, if not hanging upon the same tree ! -ttiarir r. JKH I'l.llY. NILI U WAHK, Ar. JV VY SMI I II MoiiiiireH-ciiuiij nitoiin the ladies and gentlemen of Cohnnhns. and public generally, lhat ho has taken a room on I dub street, three doors soulh nf the ollire of the Colinuhiia liiNiirancM Com pany, where he will be prepared lo clean nnd repair Wsli Ilea, clocks, lime-pieces, Ve. lie Ins now on band ami intend keeping a constant supply of rich and faihienable Jew. eirv, com ruling 01 ni. in-..-i'mrniiii itniu.tni nrvt Pius, Plain and Set War limes. Set and Plain Finger Hnn;s, Hracelcts. t (wins. Pencils and hvva, Shirt Simla, Can! Canes, (odd and Siher Sc tai li s, .WAr, Abut, a superior lot ofJiher Ware, all nf which will be sold low fot cash. Please rail and examine the above stock, prices, Ac. IS. W. SMITH. BCpl'J ;illW. UtK KI P LOOK LOST. IOST bv the viilwcnbcr. on the I lib mat,, a small pocket J book.'nr wallet, roiitaunng a number of notes made payable to Ihe subscriber, amminiiiig lo up aids of Jf Hal, anil a note in favor of T. O Hns fur jf.Vt The wsllet was lost in Jackson tnwnhip. Fianklin county, betwern the widow Hoie s and mv rem'eure. A liberal row ard will be paid for Ihe rccntery of all of said papers, iiplbilww. JOHN (I. NLTF. I'ltOt I. A M TIO. TIIK quililied electors of rraiiklm c ounlvare hereby no. illicit to meet on the second Tuesday of October next. Iiein the lllthd iv of said month, in the several election districts in said county, at Ihetnoul places of tuddinu elections, or al such places aa the ttiwnhip truiecs shall direct, and ni sticii places in inn several wiirds in Ibueilv nl Columbus as Iho City Council shall designate, nud proceed according to law to vole lorn Governor of the Sttto of Ohio 1 one Hepresentalive 111 the Unniiresi of Ihe I mini Status, for the enmities of Franklin, Delaware and Licking ; one Senator in represent inn counties ot f rank tin nml Delaware m the Stale Lejinlalurn i one Itepresriitalive in the Stale Legisls-lure for the county ol Franklin, nnd one lor the counties ol Franklin and Delaware a Prosecuting Attorney a County Surveyor, and oue Poor House Director, for Iho county if Franklin. And iho Trustees nf the several townships are hereby no- tilled to select lliuir respective apportioruneiit if Jurors, ami return the same to the Clerk o the Court of Common I'leas nf said county ol r rauklin, with tlie poll books uf said election, lo w it : Moiitiomcryr. 33 Plain A Norwich S llniolton .... tt Hleiiibm A I trow n 1 Madison H Sharon A I'ranMiu.. ( Trtiro fi Clinton i I'raine 3 Mdllm 9 Perry t Jkson 4 Jellervon 4 Washinuloiu, ,1 Pleasant... 4 (iiveu under mv band, at mv oltice, in ihe citv of Colum bus, this lUb day of September, lilbl. in the I'dh year of Ihe Stale, and of the ludeiHiiltleiicc of the I niled States, tho 7.W. JOH N liii MIAM, st-pld. Slientf uf Fr.iukliii county. OAKLAND I I: MALL NLMINAIIY, IIIU.SllOKlH till. mini. HI. Fall seKion of this Institution ill commence on JL Mondnv . 'i'lth of SeptemlMT. Fr lerms, V c , df c, see the InM Catalogue, which mat be had at the h.iokMnre nf II. Hi ley Co., t olmubna. or ot the ffimipd at llills-oormigh Jl)x Mel) MTHLS, Principal, HilNhorongh, Sept. II '.'tdA.lw. HTAKLIM. M KDICAL COLLI iiE. TIIK, annual couro ot Lectures will commence on the fir l Wednesday in Novcuilier next, and continue sixteen week". Too preliminary con ran will rotntnence on the first Wednesday in October, during which mouth thora will lie three lectures daily. In October the following subjects will lie taught : Microscopical Aiialemv Prof Judkiua. Minor Surgery I'ruf. Howard. Inamly I'rol. Smith. I'oiious Prof. Carter. IVsical Diagnosis Prof, Uutterfield. llotanv I'nd'. Merrick. This course is free, and it I hoped as minv students as possible will avail themselves of its advantages. ' FACULTY. Il. nry II. Childa. M. D., Prof, of Obstetrics and Diseases nf W omen 11ml Children. John Hullcrtield, M. D., Prof, nf the Practice of Medicine. Ilirhanl I.. Ifonanl, M. D.. Prol. of Surgerv. Jcskc P. Judkms, M. 1),, Prof, ol tienenil and Hpecial An. atomy. Sninuel M. Smith. M. D Prnf.nf Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Medical Jurisprudence. Pranria Carter, M. D., Prof, of Physiology and tJeneral Pathology, Frederick Merrirk. M. D.. Prof, nf Chemistry & Botany. Norman liay, M. 1)., Heninnstrator of Aiialomy. FF.F.S. Lectures, - . - J.'tfi (XI Mmriculation, $3 00 (irailualion, . .'0 IN) Directing Ticket, 0 UU IiihhI board from $1,60 to N.'.ihi per week. JUtl ttl 1 1 l.tir ir.1.11, aiig7. Dean of the Faculty, Mi-.DicAL (lli:(;i: or omo. nHF. Facully, soliciloua nl giving ntudenls every oppor-X tiniHv of instruction, will commence Lectures 11 the 1st MONDAY in OcIoImt, both in the College ami Hospital. On the 1st MONDAY la November the established Collegiate course commences, ami terminates 1st March. JOHN S. SHOTWKI.L. M. D . Anatomy. JOHN Lot KK, M D,Chumtry. H. D. MUSSI Y, M. D , Surgery. L. II. LAWSON.M.D, Materia Mcdica and Cenersl Pa-lliology.M. II WHIOHT, M. I)., Obstetrics ami inseasesoi wo men and Children. JOHN P. HAHKISON, IM. P., Theory and I'ractica 01 Medicine, On Hie 1st MONDAY in Or tuber, the Disserting Hnnnis will Im one nod under the direction of the Prnl'cnnr of An Tbelollottiiiggei.lleuieiicoui.titutetlieTfl,,,,t,r. "ud Assistant, JOHN DAN IS, M. D., Deinoa Terms: Matriculation $.; HoRpilal Dissecting Tick-cl S'lUt Slid e.veli Professor 's Tn kct 'l.i. JOHN P. ll.MUilSO.N.Deaii. ju!y:tl $,IX' Cin.Cas. K LM YON COLLIKii:. rTHF. Winter Term ol Ibis limiiiulioti opens nn Tlinrs. X day, Sept, 'J Faenllv of Vila liwv. S. A. Hronson. D D . President, and Professor of Moral nnd Intellectual Phi1pliv. Hev. J. T. Hrooke, D. D.. Piob-sor of lihetoric. Itev. Alet.F. Dobb, A.M., l'rb..Mir of the Latin and (ireok languages, F. C. liota, A. M., Professor of M.tMieniaIics nud Natural Philosophy. II. L. Thrall. M. D., Professor of Chcliiiilry, Mineralogy and ticolngv Hev. N. lUdger, A. M., Principal of the Preparatory Do partmenl. Further iiiformalion may be had by appt) ing to the Presi-dent at liamhufr, Kimi co , l lino. sepl 1. HYAVN KID SIIOLS. NOTHFR bd je-t arm eil bv eprea. including liijlit eolnrnl HI Sh INS, lor Mines' ami children. j.im:i. H. COWLI.i 6l CO. er I HANkLIN noi m rrri III 1 Farmer! known 11" Ammmn Ihutr." jjf J TIH', aulwentier would renpnel fully inform the traveling public lhat he h is rented ll.n above aland, and Is prepared lo ncroinuiodnle lli who ma) fivor him with a nil, sasuriliJ tlieni lliai ins nusi eiioria w 111 im- i-vtihi render tliem comlorluble. I ln rooniw are eonimodionn, nun nre supplied with new and tinltihln furniture for comfort and otmvenieiice. The Traveler inav ret asnrefl that ho will always find a home " at the " Franklin House.'' I!. MONT JOMLTY. rortsinoulb.O.. Sept. L)$:w frihuiieiV Clip-vr. MA III ETTA COLUx;K. THK Fall term of Una Institution opeua itn Wednesdar, Sept. ''7th. in thu Colleiriiite und Scieniific IV.inH.nt'. and m Wednesday. Sept. Lith, iu the Academic Deourt' ment. I hu fullimimr trciitlcmnu coiistilule tlm Fiimliv Henry Smith. I) U I'rexideiit. mid l'ri.l.a.F nl' M.,,.,1 and iiielleetual philosophy. , " "omncK. iw. a., i roiessor ol mo Latin and tircelt Lnngu.ii'cH and Liter-nun-.. Km el W;ird At.,lr..wu t a P.ru-.. r i..ik i:. and Natural l'tnb,sophy.' ' irani IIiiil' ham. l X ti,r..,.. ,,r ei,n,i,. m.... alogy mid Ideology. ' " Saiuue Mi.well. M. A., Principal of Iho Academy. A van H. VVuslihiirn, It. A., Tutor and Librarian. J tin iriHtllUIIOII IS ill tOH,0.iomi nl' . ul..i.l.l ..,) A.tnl.. sive Philoaoplncnl Apparatua.nf a clinice colleclion of Mm-eralogical specimens, ot Libraries, embracing more than bOOU volumes, nml is fully prepared to giv0 u thorough edit-ration in every branch of collegiate itudy. The Suciildic course ilt:sigiieit for those w ho propose to devote thcnm-lves to husineas pursuits, occupies three years, and embraces with thu exception of the languages, all tho studies of ihe College coume. Tho measure of success winch has thus far attended nn effort, 111 which tho corporation is engaged mui-e urn IMIIOB 01 lie IliNllUlIIOn, IB BUCI) SN 10 IIUCO it upon a broad und firm foundation. Students bavins; in the Christian m:tllstrv. can receive, ercnrdimr to th number of applicants, tho whole era major part of their tu-ition as a gratuity. Charges for tuition in the Collegiate arid Scientific departments, 25 per vwar : in tho Academic from jKllo 7. nerterm ol I I ur..lH fl'i.. ..... t...,i all oxponsus. save clotbiiig and books, nued not eicsed ilOO per year. w In respect to moral influence, it is h..lid nn ..r. ni can be loutid for tho euucation of the young. Further information mav be had bv niioluimr tn tl. lrn.i. dent, or to Douglass Pmnaiii,Ks(j., lluriner, Secretary of Ilia Marietta, Sep. 11 wd&3ww. SIIIOHIFF nnd Mnsttir t'oinmisKiner Hnlc. In pursuance to an order of the court of common picas of the county uf Friutklis.aiid State of Ohio, mado in u certain cause therein pending, wherein I'vrena Wfiileheod is complainant, and John McMullen and others are renpon-dents. I shal! oiler for tale at Hie door of the court Iioiiho il said l-raiiklin counlv. on Iho dnv nt'( titotur kpo .. tweeii llm hours of 1(1 o'clock, A- M.,und 4 o'clock. P.'m., uie loiiowiug UescritMid real oMate, aituate in the county of Ftaiiklin, anil Stale of Mho, wit: A part of in-lot iiiim-Iwr one hundred and fifty-seven, in the town of oithn.g-ton, in said county, viz :'beinu two-lhirda of tlm urnio.d f said in-lot, being the part of the samo taking the whole width of said in lot on Main street, in said town of or-tliiiigton, and running in depth west two-thirds of ihe distance of said lot. except so much of said nrcmisea wu conveyed by said John McMullen lo said I'vrena Whitehead, to wit: one-third of iu-lot number ono hundred nnd tiny, seven, (C7, in the town of Worthington aforesaid, begin, mng at the northeast corner of said lot, thence running win lb four rods on Main street, thence west through tho centre ol the lot ten roils, thence north fournKls to A. Ktl-bourne's lot, thence east lo the place of beginning. Appraised at $ U'Ai. Tonus cash. JOHN OIIAIIAM, Sheriff; siid Special Master Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs. fco .U7. SIILKIIF nud Mn-tcr Coiiiniifsioner'a Nh. Hy virtue of un interlocutory decree made bv the court of common pleas of Franklin county, Slate of Ohio, nt May " ereoi, n. i, ioio, in a certain cause ttierein pending, wherein Justin Morrison is complainant, and Corgo .iuBa m uen iiuiini, i snap oner lor sale III tlie iloor ot the court house of said comity , on the tM day of Oct fiber next, between the hours of III o'clock, A. M . and 4 o'clock, P. M., the following described real estile.aitualo iu the county of Franklin nod State of Ohm, to wit : A part of half section?, tnwnrdiip.'i, range '12. Itefugee tract, hounded as follows : biiitiiimg in ihe south hue ol snnl hull section I t', poles east of High street, in tho city of Cnluinlnis, thenco east with said half section line )(H'poles nnd III links to a stone j thence north '.ty poles lo a post ; thence west I Pi poles nnd IU link lo a poM j thence south ii degree, east ;t;t poles and II finks to the hcgiuiiinir. containing twenty-two 7y.HK) nf-res, ,.ecpling six acres oil' the wesi end which was conveyed ov l.eorge hrnuhs nud wile to Daniel Kswine, by deed, dated OctolK-r 27, IU l.t. ihus leavit.g Iti ly.)acrtjs. Appraised at IflJ per acre. Terms cash JOHN liUAHAM, Sheriir, hml Special Ma tor Commissioner. Sept. 1). Prer. fee JdJHJ. 0III:KII'F mid Muolcr oinniKKloner's Kale, O Hy virtue of an interlocutory decree made by the court of coir n pleas of Franklin county, State ofOhio, jn a certain cause therein nemling. wherein Nullum Jenkins is complainant, and JneUon Hiddle and others nre dch-nd nuts, 1 ah ill olli-r for sale at the door of the court house ol said Franklin county, on the '1-iA day of Orloher next between the hours nf 1(1 o'clock, A. M.,aiid I o'clock, P. M,, ihe following dcscrilM-d real estate, situate in eanl county of Franklin, and Slate of Ohio, to wit : In-lot in Ihe ton n of Fraukliiilou, iiiimber one hundred and sitlvsix, ( No. 1m!. Also, the in lot in said town of Franklinton number one hundred andnxty-sevcii fNo. 1(17.) as the aame i numbered and designated on Ihe reconled plat id' said town. Appraised as follows: In lot No. h-'Jiit y.jOj in-lot Nn. lt,7 w.t i'.UJ. Terms cash. JOHN OKAllAM. Sheriff, nnd Sort: i d M uter Coiiiiiuasinnr. pt. 9. Prs fee5J.. OIlKltll'F nnd .1iiktir Commissioner's Nnle. O Hy virtue nl an interlocutory decree made bv the court of common picas nf Franklin county. Slate of Ohio, at the July term thereof. A D., IH.7, in a certain cause therein ponding, wherein Lyric Starling is complainant, and (ieorgo rtrauss ami ollieis are respondent a. I s II oiler tor ml at the door of the court house of stud Franklin county, nn iho ""7 .-i"iwir next, iiiuwceil llie Iioiirs (I in o clock, A. M ,and o'clock, P M., the follow ing described n-al estate, silunle in the county of Franklin, and Stite of Ohio, to wit : In-lot in the city of Cnlumhua numlier Iwo hundred ami lorry-seven, (.vi. . as the same is numbered and do-signaled on the recorded pi it of said cily 'Perms cash. Appraised at ..UOO. JOHN CUAH M, Sheriff, and Special Muster Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs. fee 5J.is. SimtlFF nnd Muster CommisMoner's NhIp. Hy virtue of on interlocutory decree made bv the court of common pleas of Franklin counlv. State of Ohm. t tt. July lerm thereoi; A. D., Itil7, in a certain cause therein iiendmg, wherein Lyne Starling is complainant and Robert Hutchcr is defemlxul, 1 ahsfl otf-r for sale st Hie door nl'thn court house nf siid roiinty, on the 2.W day of October neil, lielween the liouis of Ml o'clock, a M., am) 4 o'clock P.' M.. the following described real estate, situate in the county of Franklin, aud State of Ohio, in wit: In-lot in the citv of Columbus number four hundred and seventy-two, 'U ) JIH1N liHAHAM, Sheriff, Special .Mastet Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs fee 51,117. SIILKII F nnd Muster Commissioner's Nnln. In pursuance to nn rderol Hie court of common pleas of Franklin county, Ohio, made in a ceriais caue thriein pending, wherein ( imlavus Swan is complainant, and Charles r . aenencft is oerenoini, i snsii oiler lor sale at ihe door of the eourl houae of aaid county, on the 'ikl day nf October aext. lielween the hours nf Hi o'clock, A. M., ami 4 o'clock, P.M., the following described real estate, situate in the county a' Franklin, and Siate of Ohio, low it : In lot in Ihn city of Columbus number sevenly-au, (No.)',) as the aame is numoereo ami iiesitin aleil on the recorded plat of said cily. Appraised at :M. Term cash. JOHN OIUHAM. Sheriff, and Siiecial Master Commissioner. Seet 9. Pre. fee $1 117. S" HKRIFF'S KAI.K.-HM.7uVofVw"riiorH faVt lev la. iatued from the court of common pleas of Franklin county, to me directed. I shall oflrr for sale at the door of Ihe eourl house of said Franklin counlv, Stale of Ohio, on the ittd dav of October liev,t betwern the hours ol 10 o'clock, A. M.. and 1 o'clock. P. M , thu fnllowinndescritH d real estate, situate in said Franklin counlv, and State of Ohio, to wit: In-lot No. !U. in the (own of Franklinton, known and designated aa stu b on Iho reconled plat of said town. Levied upon as the prowwly of Win. II Howe, at the suit uf Jacob Swsrtx. Apprised nt C.'iNI. Termscaxli. JOHN tiltAHA.M, Sheriff. Sept, 9. Prs. fee 5 ! ,V2. OlIFJUFFM NALK.-Hy virtue of a writ of It t. t O lev. la., iHiind Irom the court of common pleaa of Frank lin county to inn directed, I shall offer lor sale at Ihe dor of llie court house of said rouniv, nn the 2. Id day uf Or to. lrr next, bi'lween llie hours ol 111 o'clock, A. M!, and to', clock, P. M., Ihe following described real estate, situate m Ihe county of Franklin, Slide of Ohio, lo wit : the east one-third of m lot iu Ihe town of Franklinton numlier eighty line. (III.) as Ihe same is numliered anddeaif oated upon Ihe recorded id it of said town, levied upon aa the pttuierty of John Caldwell, at the suit of J ph Helrnir k. ailiniiustrs- lor of I . me. Hclunck, dee d. Apnraised nl y UK) S,,,'1:t' JUli t,ltH'il. Sheriff. Sai.k of ki:ai. rsTATiruitDi;iroF COI KT. Oil Ihe lk day of Octolter, A D , IlilJf, between the hour of III nnd 4 o'clock, at the door of the Court House in tbn city of Columbus, Franklin counlv. u., will be sold to llm highest bidder Ihn following real estate, a Hie projMTly ol John Hirdiop, Adam llishop and Samuel Hishop. to wit; the west half of Ihe south east qusrter of .,.. .... im, mm rant'e ii. u oein ine tnmn laud that waa conveyed bv Hamuel Hishnpand wile to John Hodinp, on the Mth of Januarv. HU, bv deed, reconled in Itook In, p:ige l.lii. 7, aiibjicl to Ihe ilower of Sarah Hulmp, which hasln-enassiuneit, Apprmicdal jti'l per aeie. 'Perms oiie thnd cash, oue-lhinl in one year, ami one-third in two V ears from dale, with in I crest un deterred navmnuta 1'r.nn day nf sale, to he secured by uiorigage upon llie premises. P'-!J ' W. W. KII.F., Adm'r. ci:ni; a ikim: inhi'iti ti: rlHF. Full lerm of Una Seminary will open on the Ifth oj L Ocl., for the reception of boardimr nnd dav mini la. Tim course embraces all the studies pursued in our highest Sum mane, wim sunaiiie rniiotnphical apparatus lo illustrate the m-tniction in natural science. The plan of familiar lures nnd nral initrucnon. aoiurrrtalul m ihailiiri.nn of the Hlind. Is, to a limited extent, introduced tiers. I kit Mi For Hoard and Tuition g :u per vear. W. CIIAPIN, Principal, Late Sup't of the Ohio li... for the Blind, tieneva, N. Y .Sept. 1,1 d't wtoetlii. ADMINISTI1 .lTOKH nhK. IN pursuance to an order of ihe court of common pleas of Franklin county, State of Ohio, I ahall offer for sale nn tho "Md d.iv ot October next. Ivelween the hours of ID clock. A. M.. and o'clock. P. M .on the premises, the follow mg tle,erded real eolate, situate in the county of Franklin, ami tili- ol Ohm, to it : In-lot in the tow n of Frank lintou, No. ."fhi. Apjoaised at Terms eih. JOSF.PU K. Ol NO, sepf. Iww Adm'r of Jane WigdoU, dee'd. NLW PAU.AMI winti:u t;iNMN. ' W"' "r" lM,,"1, 'l,,t' n'idileirable ii-aorlineiil of V fre-h Fall IohmIb al our old stand, and will cuntinun to rer eive daily nml weekly secessions to our stock during the fill senaon. One of ihe firm residing in New York. w liall at nil lime lw supplied with the newest imtmrtaluma. und slvlcs "I Onnda.holh FOKI.HiN AM) DtDTIC. mid w ill endeavor to aell them as low as they cai lie bad Fast in like qu intttv, Weitern Merc,lni y)iiing this citv for the purehse o, tiooda.are respoetSdl y mviled toe ill Hid eximioe our stock. Hl.( HI.V A SIMPSON. aulT No. II, Pearl si., Cincinnati, Ohm,

WEE U Y OH 0 nn 4 nnirt filth 0 RNAL VOLUME XXXIX. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, OCT OBEK 4, 1848. NUMBER 5. PUBLISIIKL) KVKKY WEDNESDAY MOltNINU BY TIIIULL & HEED. Jfficom the Journal Building, south eh.it corner of High streotand Sugar alley. VM. B. THHAIX AND HF.NKY KF.KD, Editors. T K M rj : Turin DoM.Aitf rr.n annum, which may be discharged by tho payment of Two Doi.laus in advance, and froo of pontage, or of per contage to Agoiits or Collectors. The Journal also published Dmly nnd Tri-Weekly du in the year; Daily, por Biiniini, 7 ; Tri-Weckly, 4. MONDAY llVl'NINO, HI'IM'EMHIill IN, 1H4H. The Silence Hrokcn Col. Wellor tolling the story of hit Iteftalcnllont Any quantity ol I'liuns One Truth. A few days since, in liii own county of Butler, Col. John 11. Well it attempted an explanation of his affairs as Fund Commissioner of that county, lln speech is reported by Col. Charles II. ilrough, and by hi in published in tho Cincinnati Enquirer, from whence it it copied into thu Statesman. The slate-, nienls of Cut. Weller arc mere broad assertions, made upon his own testimony, and nocoinptinied by no prooi of any kind ; and wo are now about to take them up and exhibit the in in their own liyhtand in that of the laws of tho Htntct promising that, in thii serious examination, wo have not thu slightest desiro to do more or less than equal and exact justice to one who stniids o high in tho estimation and affections of his party in tho State, and who so fully illustrates llie glory of Democratic principles as exemplified by Locofuco i nrnclicc. I Wo shall jrivo tho whole of Mr. Brough'i report of Col. Weller 's explanation, that wo may not he charged with garbling the text, or doing injustice to the argument, and, being anxious to study brevity, wo hull take up the declarations of the candidate seriatim, intermingling them with our own comments or proof; and first: ColW. said," that as one of the Fund Commissioners of Butler county, he had been charged with the county's proportion ol the Surplus Revenue. That thiij were required to loan this fund out in such a way as to produce interest, and were charged with interest whether they made the fund produce it or not." This is not truo. By virtue of ait act of the Legislature of 1H42-I1, entitled " an to provide fot the payment of tho doiiiurttic creditors of the Htnte of Ohio," Ohio fjtat., vol. 41, lec. 7, it is provided, "that all pay mints of money or bonds received by the Fund Commissioners of any county, or collected by them, shall not lie re-loaned, but shall be retained Inj them, to he paid in'o the State Treasury," 0,-c. By a subsequent section of the saiuo act it is provided, " that all moneys, bonds or certificates in the hinds of tho Fund Commissioner of any county under this act, and required to be paid into the Bute Treasury, shall be hy said Fund Commiisiontrs paid ocer to the County Treasurer on or before the first day of December in each year, to bo by him paid to the Treasurer of State." So that, instead of being 11 required to loon this fund in such a way as to produce interest," the commissioners were eiprtssly prohibited from loaning it at all, and were required to pay it over to tho County Treasurer. Col. W. continues to sny, " that it was loaned out, on good lawful security to the county of Butler (10, 000 tho residue to some sixty-five persons." At regards tho value of the securities which were taken, Col. Weller may perhaps be a competent judge, but, although he has been culled upon by every legal means of suasion to disclose what those securities are, he has steadily resisted such disclosure, and now stands justly chargeable with a contempt for having disobeyed the express orders of a court of justice in that behalf. The securities, bonds, notes, mortgages whatever they may be, arc in his hands. In this was also broken an ni press provision ol the uivi of tho Stale -tho law of lIU, which requires that the book, funds, papers, notes, mortgages, fcc , be handed by tho Fund Commissioners over to the l.uuntj Auditor. Col. W. says further: "That as the payments of interest and parliitl payments of principal were made, the Commissioners thought fit to loan the proceeds to ono another, when no one else offered, seeing they were required to make interest upon it. It will bu seen by reference to the extracts from the laws quoted above, that the Fund Commissioners being required to pay over to the Treasurer all moneys, both of principal and interest, as fast as they were collected, they were not only not required to make interest, but were prohibited from io doing ; and certainly had (hey been so required, no man can for a moment believe that in the county of Butler, money has been ever so much of & drug in tho market that the members of a board of Fund Commissioners would be obliged to loan their trust fund to unu another," because " no one else offered " to receive it. By tho way, this division of the funds between the members of the board this loaning to ono another, is a peculiarly new and rich method of Locofuco financiering,, and saves to the public ollicer an immense amount of labor in selecting the proper persons to become debtors of the fund. 11 He says : " That he had borrowed some portion of this money every dollar of which was amply si-cured by mortgage upon real estate, winch no man, acquainted with tho valuo of property, would hesitate to pronounce an abundant security." The amount borrowed by Col. Wilier of this fund, is stated at eleven thousand dollars, and this statement has never been contradicted. By an order passed by the Fund Commissioners of the Slate, and binding in its e fleet upon those of counties, it is expressly provided that not more than one thousand dollars ol the surplus revenue should be loaned to any one person This has been violated by this sworn ollicer of tho law. Furthermore, by the act "providing for the distribution and investment of tins Stale's proportion of the surplus revenue," passed Marrh !M, l'.'7, it is provided th.it the Commissioners shall, on making a loan, require and lake from the applicant a bond, the pay ment of which v. hill be secured by a mortgage on unencumbered real est ale, of an estimated value doubli in amount to tho sum loaned, or other adequate secu rity, conditioned for the payment of tho interest semi annually in advance, and of the principal sum so bor rowed, from lime to lime, as the same may come due This provision of tho taw has not been complied with, and tho whole story of the ample security ol the lund by niorgage, is a falsehood front beginning to end When Col. Weller, or Ins co Commissioner made the loan to himself, there was no bond and mortgage taken as is required by law the mortgage was execu ted and put upon record privately, after his nomination for Governor. The mortgage was not for double the amount, nor upon property of twice the value il was for eleven thousand dollars, and upon properly nut worth more than half that sum. It was not upon 11 unencumbered real estate," but upon properly already tied up by liens and judgments to nearly or quite its value. Upon this subject, the Hamilton Intelligencer ot thu Jlsi says: We may tell 4 tale about tho farm that bo (Col. Weller) mortgaged to secure the surplus fund, which was sold last (Sat unlay, to satisfy an execution in fa tor of the minor ehildren whote guardian he teat, and tchost Monty kr squandered," Whether the mortgage was " conditioned for the payment of the interest, semi-annually" or not, no interest has ever been paid, and there has accumulated, besides the original sum, an amount of interest upon this and other moneys, now in Ins hands as follows t Interest in 'Mi $t,Mi'.J ?4 Do. 1p;I7 luM H would dread the most to have this matter legally ascertained and settled." Ho then reiterates some of his previous falsehoods, and closes by an appeal to the internal evidence of his hearers: "Ho would repeat that the payment was amply secured, and the county would lose not a cent on account of it. Ho had nothing to keep back no thing ho was ashamed or afraid his fellow-ciliacm should know. Ho had lived in that community, man and boy, twenty-two years, and they could judge whether he was chargeable with any thing incompatible with tho character of an honest man." Wo have neither time nor space, at this moment, to comment upon the sickening detail of rascality and mendacity, by a sworn ollicer of llio law, and a candidate for a respectable and a responsible oflico. The exigencies of his profession may occasionally enforce upon the hunter the task of pursuing a noisome and unclean animal, but when no longer prompted by ne cessity, he will gladly desist from a labor so irksome and profitless. We have planted facts by tho side of fictions placed the violated law by the side of the confessions of tho offender and have been enabled to show the candidate of a great party fir n hiirh oflico, in tho unenviable position, not merely of a public de faulter and cheat, but of a bold, open and public teller of falsehoods. Wo leavo him for to-day : but we have not dune with him. Thoy Couid'ut ruise a General At Dayton they had Col. Weller, Col. Morgan, Co, Brough, and Col. Medary. Shade of Boanerges Brim stone ! What eternal lots of flood wood heroes ! How tiWimety-ininded are these Licofocos ! Not one but has a handle to his namo " as long as Count de Grasses queue." Terrible aro they as Teddy the Tempestuous when freshly baptized in Donnybrook poteen, and formidable as Bombastus Furioso in his most ram pageous paroxysms. But they could nt raise a Gene ral! They might have bre vetted Weller, it is true, and given him the title of 11 Gkkkhal Defalcation," and as they did'nt see fit to do il, we will undcrUke tho job. Be it therefore understood, that in and by the power resting in us, that the name, style and tille of the gallant money borrower of Butter, be, and it is hereby changed to that of Gknkiul Defalcation. TLi:si)AV YEN ING, Swntunibor 118. I Total tjCl.Mo Wi Which has been paid over In the Treasury of the Stale by Butler comity, out of Us otrn funds, in default of any payments by the delinquent fund commissioners.He closes his statement as follows : " That he might have advoided suit on account of this matter, having preferred to turn over the books and make payment of the sum which might be ascertained to be due, but inasmuch as some misunderstanding and (LT The Government in France has invented a species of moveable barricade, (o bo used in those fights which take place in the streets. It is composed of a heavy timber construction, coaled with iron, and mounted upon wheels. We mention this fur the purpose of suggesting to our Committer or Pinnc Safety, upon which is soon to devolve the cares of a 1'hovimo al GovKUHMKHT, the propriety of preparing similar machinery to bo used when the revolutionary hostilities of Ohio shall commence here at the scat of government. What a formidahle addition In aur peace establishment would be one of these barricades, posted, say somewhere in High street, and defended by our member of the Committee, armed with thai formidable cudgel, by tho uso of which he has gained such a world-wide renown ! It would be a perfect imitation of Capt. Uragg's battery. C'J Oen Taylor says that he is a Whig. John Van Buren thinks that Gen. Taylor has no principles. Which knows the most about it? The Free Soil folks think that Van Buren is likely to be the best informed. The Whigs beg leave to doubt the superiority of John's information. The Free Soil folks think that the Whigs aro very wrong in that. When we meet a man who tells us that he is a Whig, we have no difficulty in forming an opinion as to Ins political principles. Gen. Taylor tells the people of thu United States that ho is a Whig, and there are men who claim to be Whigs idle enough to inquire what he means by it. lie means that he is a Whig. A Nick Dhtisctio. Tho "free speech " champions find it " hard sledding " to get over Mr. Van Buren 'a canting vote as ('resident of the Senate in favor of tho bill authorizing postmasters to sift out "free speech " incendiarism from the mails, and to destroy or to suppress it. They say that he only gave his casting vote in favor of its engrossment fur a third reading being careful to forget that if his vote had been the other way, it would hare killed the bill nt that stage of its progissas effectually as if it had been voted down on its third reading. fjj One thing is certain, and even the Lncofocos musl acknowledge it: Wlien Gen. Ford does break that long silence which is so irksome to tho Loco-focos, ho will TKi.t, tiik thu r il. That was what Juhn B. Weller dare not do. When he broke the " expres sive, silence " which ho has so long observed, he broke it wilhiW'rAiW. They Lent it to One Another t Those two wise and faithful functionaries, to whom was entrusted the keeping of the Surplus Revenue Fund in Butler county, discharged their duties, by loaning the fund to each other ! They thought that the interests of tho Stulo and County would be best subserved, by dividing the money between them! What a view Ibis presents of the beauties of Locofuco ollico holding ! Cauiiv Htu oi:t axii tnnv urn! The Cincinnati F.uquirer thinks that the Butler county Colonel will get beat. The editor begins to leel that the odor of defalcation U too strong to be tolerated by tho people. He says : The result will be that Mr. Ford will receive the votes of most ol tlicauti Taylor Whigs on the Reserve and throughout Dm Stale; tho votes of most of tho Abolitionists, siid the votes of most of the Taylor men throughout tlie State all the elements of opposition to the Democracy uniting on him, On theae account bis dunces of success would seem to be belter than Mr. llmlcy's or Mr- He lib's, previous to their respective elections. Another Locofuco Urcnkdown. Tho Dayton Journal of Friday, thus notice the grand affair at the celebration of the anniversary of the battle of Monterey at that place, the day before. This was intended to 1h the great movement of the season. It was advertised that Gen. Butter would certainly be on the spot, and of course everybody was pxjH'otfd to come and see linn. But (ten. Butler did not come, i.-iilier did everybody; and although the leaders exHcird Hie former, they must have been somewhat sluf ified at the latter. The speeches were made in the u ual form by Col, Weller, Cot, Allen, Col. Brough and COL. Medary. The Grand "Ntnle Mna Meeting 1" About six o'clock, on Wednesday cveuing.thc masses were discovered to be in muimn. Two strangers, who rested under strong suspicion of having come a long distance lo see K.n. Butler, put up at Swavme's Hotel, and about (ho a mm hour Citixen Simuiedary registered It it name at the Vorheea House. Later in Iho evening it was reported that tho Hon. Win. Sawyer was in town, but diligent search be inn instituted for him at all the principal Hotels Uy thu Chairman of the " Committee nf I'uhlio Safely," he could not be found, and was supposed to be out making contracts for sausages. The next arrival was a large rubicund gentleman who dressed in black, and wore a little leg. horn hat in the shspo of a dice box. II seemed to be n holly unconscious that he was an object of inter est to any one, and did not discover Ins own greatness till ho was inlormed, before going to bed, that he had been registered by S"iue wag as Gen. William O But b r, and was 11 Iho observed of all observers " during the evening. Next morning, however, the Grand Mass Meeting of the Democracy of Ohio, began to assemble m car neat. From every direction, but principally from the South and West, they poured into the town, in dele, gallons of every conceivable sue, from a man and his dog on font, up to 1 1 hi principal procession, winch, as it moved throiljll Third street, numliered (Airiyntns wagons, carnages and buggies, a few horsemen and two bands of musin. Betwern III siid II o'elu-k, Col. Weller took the stand he's in tho habit of taking ihimrs and began his speech. At no lime during its delivery, which oc. copied till half alter 1U o'clock, was there more than I OU0 persons on the gmund. In this estimate of the numbers present, Wings and Democrats seemed to bo perfectly agreed ! Oj iktiti. CorrasATioB. The Lncofoco papers have a great deal to say about Gen. Caas' agency in eeimittf the ratification of the Quintuple Treaty. While, however, we are willing In give him dun credit lor that piece ol diplomacy, we Ihmk he evinced great er surev,iiness ami skill in securing the ratification that his Gross Frauds upon the Teopie Since the exhibition of tho two several lives of General Cass, both Issued at the same office, printed with the same type, composed by the same hands and circulated by the saino committee, the ono intended to give a Northern and the other a Southern aspect to the Michigan luminary, tho Locofuco prints have been extremely busy in inculcating upon tho public the charge that the Whigs have been equally fraudulent in their multitudiuouH lives of General Taylor. The editor of the Washington Union labors through a nightmare of three mortal columns, in which, for the purpose of making the number ns huge as possible, he calls every newspaper biographical sketch a "life," and charges fraud to tho right and left, upon every Whig editor who has had the impudence to spoak well of General Taylor in his columns. After overhauling a great variety of these, from tho Toledo Blade, Boston Atlas, Cincinnati Gazette, &c, and from the letters of It. C. Schenck, Caleb B. Smith, and others, be says: " In addition to these, there are now in circulation fourteen different lives of General Taylor." He says: " His lives in the German and French languages we ae not able to decypher." Now, General Taylor's life, " in the German," has been deciphered. Wu have seen, read, and presented it lo our readers, and a dirtier Locofuco production never emanated even from the Statesman office, or was put in circulation by a profligate public defaulter on his stumping expeditions. Its author dure not own the infamous progeny its printer conceals his nnmo it is put in circulation in secret, by base and knavish men, for wicked and infamous purposes. Let the editor of Iho Globo nittko the requisition on us, and wo will sond him the proof, that he can " decypher." Tiik Fhaui) Wouks Wku.. Gen. Cass' two lives, issued from the Globe office, the Northern life and the Southern life, the Wilmot Proviso life and the anti-Wilmot Proviso life, are creating a strong excitement in Virginia; old Democrats, in view of (his fraud, are : turning from Cass as they would turn from a convict. They think, and justly too, that an attempt to swindle men out of their votes is no belter than an attempt to . swindle them out of their purse, Ono of tho Wnig electors in Virginia, as soon as he learned the fuels in regard to thune two lives, ordered leu thousand copies for his own uso five thousand of the Northern or Wilmot Proviso life, and live thousand of Iho Southern or anti- Wilmot Proviso life. More upon Gen, Cass Temperance. We look upon it as a matter of no laomenl whether Gen. Cass was all Ins life a strict temperance man or not. Tho question is, has he not been a hypocrite in al his te nie ranee professions. If he and bis friends had claimed nothing, no examination of his history upon that subject would have been necessary , but all tho world is interested in unmasking tho hollow pretentions of a hobby-riding claimant of sanctity to which he has no real right. The following, from the Detroit Advertiser, prenenls some new light upon the subject, and wo shall not be surprised if some of our friends exclaim in relation to this modern Falstaff, what the merry Prince Hal did of the ancient "What an inordinate quantity of sack !" The friends ot the Hero of the Canard are constantly presenting and urging his claims lo the suffrages of the people of iho United Stales, on the ground lhat he is now, and ever has been, a living monument of the utility of cm tire, abstinence from lite use of ardent spirits. That Gen C ana is a lemperute man at pre. neat, wo admit; but that Ac, or bis fritnds, made pretty free use of the ardent, when, as a Commissioner of Indian Affairs, he was negotiating a treaty witli the Sag-inaws, is evident from the following fuels found in Voucher No. GO, vol. 2, American State Papers, Indian All' urn, puge IHO, paid 4th January, le'4, by the United Stales on (he certificate of General Cass, liefer to the book, Mr. Free Press, and read as follows, viz: For the table furnished for the commissioners and officers of Iho Indian Derl. ment, and other persons, and Indiaimin-vited thereto, from the lid to the iJUtli of Sept , Inl'.f, amounting lo ii27 meals, at 7oc per meal , It!) gallons cogniac brandy and barrel y bur re Is rider , gallons L. P. Tennrilte wine and libJ. gallons fourth proof spirits , y iron bound casks , l!) gallons wine If gallons lime juice and keg 10 galloni) whiskey fj gallons gin and keg GI7 14 14 IWJ ",'lt 110 irv.i 50 w 00 4 00 108 Ot) o 00 10 00 u 00 Tiik Hitfai.o Convkktion. The history of mankind scarcely offers an example of an alliance like this the first of the Van Burens with the last of the Adams. We have believed that I here was a time and place for every thing under tho sun, but never be-dreamed tint an Adams could link his fate and fortune with the head of the House of Van Buren ; and (hot, loo, upon an anti-slavery iixue. If the gh'nt of the fat tier, or grandfather could rise from the graves of the deae, they would be a.ilounded at such degeneracy as this. Mugs County Telegraph. llnckinff Out in llttinilton County. The Locofocos of Cincinnati have become a little afraid to trust themselves in Ihe position which they took upon the apportionment. Having, doubtless, the assistance of some military gentlemen, lately relumed from the wars, whoso rtconnuiianres have been more scientific than any herelolore made, they have discovered themselves posted in a false position, having both flanks and Iheir rear badly exposed. The following xtract from a communication received in this city, hows an attempt at a retrograde movement, for the pur pose of occupying ground previously condemned in the war councils of the parly. After beating all the points if war over the aland which they had taken, arid sounding tho charge so ferociously, their sudden change of front, looks, to say the least, rather low priced : " But the Democracy cornered themselves in Ihe rebellion matter For iliey dared not carry out their own propositions, which they adopted at their conven- lion by a irreat majority. 1 liey declared Iliey would vole llie whole comity ticket as formerly, ''isregardmg the apportionment, and denounced any Democrat who liould not do Hi at same, as a traitor and no IJciuo. crat Since their convention, however, they have concluded to change front nn that subject, and it is now understood, and indeed published abroad to the faithful, that they may vote according to the apportion, ment law. Il was rather a short turn to make in the very face of the enemy, but they have done it." Goi.n Pens. Among the great variety ol inven tions for use and ornament, for which the ago is s re markable, and this country is so celebrated, there is no one whose great and apparent utility has brought it in. to more rapid and general uso than that of tho gold pen. He who writes, whether regularly or occasionally, cannot but experience the pleasure which arises from having constantly at hand a pen that never fails, never needs mending, that is ever ready and uniform. To the habitual writer, the accountant, the editor, the business man, they are almost indispensable, and to any one who is required to register in black and white his do'iigs or Ins thoughts, they are invaluable, 1 he one with which this is written, is one of a splendid irlment of every kind, variety and price, which we had the pleasure lo examine at Ihe store of Win. A Plait iV Co., in this city, a few days ago. (J J" We observe lhat it is announced in the Cmcin nali pipers that the Chairman of the Committee on Public Sifety, tho President of the lale Locofuco fix- lie in Columbus, the F.ditor of the Ohio Statesman, the Postmaster nf Cotuuihui, and the Citizen Hamme duy have all arrived in that city. We hopo lhat they may have a good time, and be returned to their re spective avocations, respecting friends and expecting families in peace. Tkc llr.Aiioi muv GumialCam has so little Militaiiv Fawk. Tho Locoficos in 110 proved, to their own satisfaction, thai General Harrison was fourteen miles from the field when the bittllo of the Thames was fought. Tltis is, doubtless, the reason why General Cass, who was his aid, failed to acquire any military fame. He was so faraway lhat ho could' nt be distinguiihtd A Tiiinn Pabtv Tnimrii In the sevrnlh Con gressional District, Illinois, Harris, a Locofuco slavery extensionisl, was elected to Congress by a majority of InG over Logan, a Whig freo territory man, which was done hy the third party giving KiG votes to their own candidate, who they knew they could not elect. QT We observe with pleasure, that the Cincinnati Globe, which is by far the mst influential of the Free Soil organs ol Ohm, docs not approvo nf Ihe movement made at the late Free Soil (.'.invention in cont'roversy bad taken place regarding ll.f books, he J" lte.. '1 ho documenls show lb - , 1 f , , , , pay, lur a numbi r of years, was five fold, via : preferred to have a I Iho facts legally ascertained and ( - . f . . . 1 , 3 As Governor of Michigan settled This story Is set at rest by the fact, that although the law of 184G expressly provided for Ihe delivery of books, papers and securities, over to tho proper officer, and although a suit in chancery has long been pending to enforce sui-b delivery, stilt it has never taken place, and ii now tho especial point of resistance by this ollicer who, at this moment, of all in the world, woo Superintendent uf Indian Alfairs. ....... . loot) Olhec rent, Ae I MM Captain in llie Army ,, li-t) Ten Rations a day, at Wo ?,0 In addition to this, h drew a handsome per diem allowance aa Quartermaster, mileage, Ac , Ac , Ibua proving himscll to be a man of extraordinary skill in extracting the peoples' money from Ihe National I reas ury. Mbany Journal 174 What proportion nf the 41 gallons fourth proof spirits and the 10 gallons of whiskey wero manufactured at tfie distillery owned by the late Henry 1. Hunt nod Lewis Cass, and which was located just below the old May lot, and continued in operation until it was indicted as a nuisance, the coiunnsnioher does uol stale 111 his vouchor. Daro Lewis Cass or any gentleman conneclcd with him, deny that be was a partner Willi the lalo Henry 1. It unl to that distillery r vo wan lor a repiy. an uli settle 11. liouisiiinn. Tho Philadelphia North American publishes the fol lowing extract, received by a merchant of lhat city, from New Orleans. Knowing something of the source from which it comes, and knowing that no man is bet ter qualified to form a correct opunon, or more likely to express one lhat tuny be relied 011, than the writer .we copy the extract as follows : "New Oulkans, Sept G, Im-K " liouisiana is more ilian safe lor Taylor sho is certain Within the lust few days a comnlele chaniro has conic over tho apecl of things, and the blaze of enthusiasm burns brightly through the city and Ktuto. A new feature has presented ilsif in the forma-lion of Union Rough and Ready Clubs, entirely dis tinct from Ihe ward clubs, or ihe regular organization of the parly. They have Iheir origin among the " Democrats," and are formed exclusively of tho bone and smew ul our population, the working clas ses the people. There has been one formed in llie Second Muni. cipalily, which already numbers :ti)0 member, and an other in the third, whose organization I attended last Thursday uighi. Five unl of Ihe six Vice Presidents were Democrats, and Ihe meeting was uIiiiohI entirely composed ot working men mechanics, stevedores, long-nhore ineii, and (he like. "The Locol'ocos (I don't mean Democrats, for they art with us,) are completely sppalled. They have not Had 0110 respectatue ward meeting yet. iheir ranks are so much thinned by desertion lhat they are completely depressed, Their last gun has been spiked." Heller's Defence. The following specimen of machine verse was sent to us. It is not Ureiner's, though it was ground out to some tune ; neither is it very wttl, though it does up H titer pretty mil. We like il. It is highly moral in its tone, and goes against stealing as uugcnleel and dangerous. It it called The Nolilnquy nl General Ic Intention. ll'a fttniin U111 hiifi k't-p tnlkuia so, Ami try to ifi't tip ucli a Hllicr; We did'nt tUal the money! no, Wo ttorrutPtd it of osk anoDIkh. Tis wrong lo steal, and those tint do it Get pn imbed, siiro ; (lie re mn'l lie doubt on't : Then wltal's tlio ue lo leal, noil rue it, When wo could 110 lite county out on't f There miL'lit le borrowers lienides 'I'liev did'nt wxiit It irt"n than we did j 1 nlrtMi lised tlul Swart wout cli.q. And thought I'd try lo do as be did. 1 went lo Mexico In try And gut some glory to defend inoj But there I t ulnl. ..'r low or l.u'li, coutd'nt find no ont to tend ou. Rut public fund's another tliin?, And 1 and my otlictal brother To linger cah wn bad lull swuni M't Unt tt all to ont anothtr! Attrvtt at Munin'.R. An atrocious attempt to murder a colored woman, named Mary Davis, living in the rear of Gen. K Gale's Hotel, was made by a colored de per ado by the name of Lewis Clark, on Saturday evening, about D o'clock. He entered her house in tho dark and slabbed her as she lay in bed in some six or seven different places, severing the external jugular vein, and making several frightful incisions in the shoulders, breast and hinds. Dr. J. 8. Skinner was called immediately, and after checking the hnmiorrbage and applying suitable dressing, left Ihe patient in quite a comfortable s tuation. Clark has been arrested and is iu the bands of justice. . Fkiuiis vmn Pckdhyi.vama. The Lorofocos are already hoiting their banners in the Old Key Stone Stale, inscribed " Cass, Holler, and the Tanlfof '4!l." If Pennsylvania be deceived tins lime it will he her own fault, and she d rvca to inlfer lgan (int. (H" The Lncofocos fei 1 very bad over the idea that Gen. Taylor never gave a vote in tin life. Let them rest in peace, comforted with the consoling reflection thai if he had voted il would always have been against them. 3. Will perform in Columbus on Friday, the 0th of October, for one day only. Howes St, Go's irreat Unitod Minim ( !ircon nmbrnfon ih 1 largest troupe over organized, consisting of the most distinguished anil talented equestrian mid artists, both mala and lemale. hi addition to this highly celebrated company, is a troupe of AJno ileal Uedouiu Arabs. whoso performances have been the wonder and ilelijjlit nf all who hava witnuKsed their unapproachable acts. The public may be assured that tlicrie inmi aro no " counterfeit presentments," but the real uncivilized sons of thu desert, The lire at learn of cainelH. driven bv two nntivo Arabs. Tho groat Ktfyplian Unison Chariut, drawn by Twelve Heul Nvriiin Cninels. two of which are while ihe Sacred Albino Camels the first ami only ones ever irtioorted. A so lend id rnnrcscuUtiou of Onnnn Mab's Fairv ('buriol. drawn by a stud of Twelve Diminutive Rhetliind Ponies ilriven in hand by MAJOR STO'K.NS, Iho DWAUF. in Conveyance of en juvenile r.queKtrmn. Locomotive (ias will be used, bv which the whole eat ah. lisbinent will be lighted as bright m noomlny. AOimiiaiice iiox auu ni cis. l liiidreii nail price. Afternoon perfnimance at 'J. rWeiiiinr at 'lie above w ill icrt'orm at liellcl'onlniim Mombiv.Oct 2d. at Miirysville. Tuesday. ltd, Del iware. Wednesday 1th, Wor-thimf on, Thursd.ty, oth, and Circle. ville, Salunhv, 7th days f Oiiolinr. soplti ,'twwiVltd. n on fTi ly ui' iXFt 1 nTn TtH Dyseulerv, Dinrrham, Ac. J'oiilicety eund in a few hows. The tiraefeiibcrir Coiiuianv pledges itself to tho following lads: Ul. The firiicfeiiherir Ilysen :ery Synip will cure the Imen-1 cry, lliarrhtea, &,c, in twenty-lour hours. !id. A cure is warranted, no milter how bad the est no ; cren if the discbarui-sarc bloody and constant. 1 be moucv is mutant jy rfminocu 11 a cure is noi ine result, I housaiius ot 1 1 res have been saved by its use j m some instances where llie patient have been given up. lib. .Numerous testimonial)! aro on file at the Company's Olheo, which would natifv the inot increibiloue, A letter jimt received from Joicpli 1', I lail, Suffolk, a., contains the loiiowinu : 0 7 The Dysentery Syrup rures in every case." " Tfm same proof is daily corning in from every State in the I iiion. 'J 'Ins citraordinarv medicine should be reported to the moment any bid sMoptomM ar near. Seamen, Boatmen, Travelers, ami ail oilier should have a supply, us its timo-fy tife will save life. The Medical ('acuity are atdoninhed at its power; freely cniil'esHriL' tit it there is no other medicine al alt to bo compared with it TIIK CHIIJiliCN'S PANACF.A, iseijii ill v eltiracimiK in all the bowel and summer cnmplnints ot children. 1N0 mutlicr or ptivftician should bo without it. The ii iicr.il ii'iitx lor Kraukhn coiiutv, aro I. N. WIIITIMi & IH M'I.V.TON, Columbus. The medicine nny lie had of Dr. J. II. Lewis, Wortbing-toit. aul UhondcK Ai l,e is. He) iioldidiuru;. sepl.t, CIIANCKKV NOTICK. I;U V! B. I). OUHK.,Sussiil).Oi!dim. William R.Chot-J wood, Hannah Chetwood. Jiuiilhari Itirtlelt, t's. Laac Ci. Oudeii. M iruarei Oadeii, Klua I lavton, Sally DavU n, Susan Hovil. William Itoyd, tJeoruiaiia HnrrodMnr'y Campbell, Kiualwili r'oMer.'CeorL'c f-'onter. Thomas It. C. Hay-ton, Aanm O. Hiyton. Jane Kerrian, William Kerrian, Amelia (i. flaylon, IVirt Irving. William (i. Immi, Ccorife Al. (g. den, r'ran'cis II. Olenlfill in Chuncerv. Ill the Court of Common p,. fr tb county of Franklin, and State of ( no. The said del'i-n.bititn nrc'hcrcby not died, that llie said Complain ml Invc tiled their bill of complaint in bind court, wherein they allege that prior to the year A. D , IliJI, the late Jonatbin Pivton, ul I ho Stale of Now Jersev, was sen. d of ihn undivided sfiventenn fifty-fourths fl7-M,) of lbs lollowinii deicnlied real eotale, Mtu.ite in said coiiuiy, to wit : the hi-eo ml uurlcr ot the first township 111 Ihe loth raritffl of I niled Slates Military lands, containing I .'SHI acres -lti.il Clint It. Hiyion. John Hiyton, Mary Williamson, 1 iconic .i. ivuen ami t mini It listen, were seued ol llie umlivnlcd remamiiitf part ul uil land as tenants in common with gnid Jonathan Dayton that an agreement was made bv and between said tenants in coinni"ii. lor ttie nartition ol said premises, wherebv llie said Jonathan Un ion was to have ami hold the tract of ,1 acres laid oil in the northeast cor ner of said section and also, lot So. I I, in the other part ot' said section, according to a plat of said land on record in inul county, in severalty a Ins share of said premises t tnd the said Kb as II. Haylim, Mary Williamson, John Djvtoti. rrancis 11. Utftien ami tieore M. Ojdon were lo liavo and hold the remaining part of said land in severalty aa their share of tho same. That in accordance) with said agreement, Ine parties (maid acreoiiieiit took possession and have field and enjoyed possession of said land each of their re-speclne parts nforenatd ) severalty, and ihe anid Jonathan Hayton, by Inn deed duly executed and delivered, conveyed all bis interest in that part of i;ml laud so partitioned lo bis said cotenaiits, to them in fee simple, but llie said cotenanls have hitherto wholly neglected anil refused to convey their interest in the pirt so set oil' to said Jonathan Dayton in severalty, aud tlio legal title lotto undivided thirly-sevan lift). fourths of saiil land remained in them in trust, navrr-tbelesa, for said Jon it linn Divlon. That tho said complainants are the owners by pure ha mo and descent of the interest of in id Jonathan iMyion in said lands, and said dclcmUnts are Ihe owners bv descent or nlherwue of the interest ol aid rnlennnta of iaid Jnnatban Davton in said land. And sain inn prays mat said defendants may be decreed to con- vey in said complainants all their interest in that part of said Und so partitioned to mtd Jonathan Dayton, u aforesaid, and also for genoral rohef Hy SMYTH ti 4t SPUAi.CK, seplli oww. Sols, for complainants. GKOIKiK TAYLUIt, adni'r ot John Harney, deceased, es. H.irney, widow of said John tiirnev, Ira and Kmily Alidtbv, Joel ami Caroline Walling, William and Sarah Ann llntf. Ildmund and Minerva I.11111, Lucas and Julia McComb, John II, and Win. II. Harney r'ranklm county Common I'leas I'rlMon to Mill land. "Notice is hereby given to the above named defendants, widow and heirs oi'lhe late John Harney, due d, that at the May term, llllll. of the r ranklm county Common I'leas, Ohio, mid administrator filed Ins petition tho object and prayer of which is to obtain an order, Are., at Ihe neit term of the said court fertile sale of the following real entitle, of w hich llie snul John Harney duel scitcd. ni so much thereof aa may be necessary to pay Ihe debts of Bu decedent, in wit : la-lols in the town of Worlhincton, in said f ranklin county, numharad liKOIttiK TAYLOR, leplb Iww. Adm'rol John Harnev, dee d. IM THAU FKMAI.K HCH1NAHV. TIIK Winter Term ul' the J'utnam f emale Seminary will commence Wednesday, Oclobor4Mi, aud will continue 2j weeks. i'he tlcsign of this Institution, in its nresent oriraniiation. is to eluvale the itandard nf Female education. It lias a I'riumry, Academic and Collejriale Department. Through its excellent 1'rincinal. Instructerpsflea and Professors, it provides thorough and solid instruction for the various stages and branchy of education deemed requisite to the formation of 11 useful, accomplished Chrbdiaii character. 1 ne mil ionei(iaie course occupies four years, and has, it is behoved, a wider nuigo of studies, and a more thorough nyt,tem o instruction, than any similnr institution in iho State ) embracing, not only tho Kngludi branches taught in our best Collc-ues, but also the Lalut und Cermaii languages, for which there is no extra cliaruo. Young Indies, however, who du not wish toMndy the Ian-guff pes, have every facility for pursuing tb Knglish branches, which is furnished by any Kcinale Seminary. Parents, who wish to give their daughters 1111 accomplished and thorough education, ara nssured that tho very best advantages for this purpose nre tiere enjoyed nud that no pains will he spared, by coiriiietcnt and ellicient teachers, lo ren der the situation of the young ludies who may resort to the iiiMiriinoii, m tlie higlioHt degree pleasant and conducive to their mental and moral improvement. 1 tie location is deliL'fitlut, tlio bmhting ample, the acenra- modatioris excellent, und tho facilities for nuiet aud rclirsd study such as are rarely furnndmd. 1 ne expenses are put al trie lowest possible rales, t or Hoard, it hint:, and u separate mom for every two pupils. lighted and warmed, (while the season requires it.) so as to be a convenient and retired study, the charges aro $- per week for the Winter term, and Vl.7.r) tor the Summer term. Those who choonc to do their own washing will ba allowed a deduction of 2j cts. per week. 1 l'l 1 ILM. Winter Term gi (rt) Summer Term U DO i:xtua ktiuih:. Music with the use of the 1'imio, (per year.).., 30 00 (Instruction in vocal music to all pupils, gratis.) Hrawing and painting, (per year,) 15 Of) r'rench, Ii tX) Latin ami Cerman, ns they are embraced in tlio regular course, no charge. Tuition in the Primary Department, per year,). 10 00 for further particulars, iiiipiirieH may be made nf the Principal, Miss M. Cone, or any of the uriileriLned Trus tees of the Institution. A. KIN(;sm;iiY, resident TKUSTKKS. Solomon Srtmois, Ai.va Hltkinuaam, J. C. GlTHHlt:, C. C. L'oav hits, C. P. Bf( KINOIl KM. A. A. fir-niniK, Sec'v. Kcl'erencoit Dr. Smith. Prei't Murietta CoIIcpo : Drs. Slown und Allen, l.nue Seminary Itcv. Cooiluinn, Cincinnati t Hcv. W. 11. Itcccher. Kuclid ; Hon. K. Lane, San dusky Cilyt Hev. II. I.. Hitchcock, Columbus; Hcv. V, H. Hone, Cbillicotbu; Huv. 11. Little, Madison, U. sep!) wifw. W LMMCYAN hliWx LlTTTiL GJCl CIM'IMVVn. OHIO, ( Inrorparatrd trith Colleuttr pmrtr and privileges.) rpHK hall term of thin luMitulinn will commence on the 1. '.'Dili of Aiiimt, nnil continue twenty-two weeks. Tho' Students are received nt any tune, yet the interest nf all concerned remlprs it very de nimble that iliey should be in attendance at early as practicable. It is presumed nothing need lie said of thu character of ibis Intditution, further than lo slate that it went into operation six years since in a rented dwelling, wilh nighleen pupils that its patronage lias been coimlantlv find regularly increamiig tn.til the present time that during the l;it MCiodon it enrolled -li.' pupils I nun ionic twelve diU'crciit States has purchased and now occupies I lie lale reeideneo of H. Starr. Km., one of the moat elevated, central, airy, nud every way desirable locations in tho city and has 11 devoted arid ludelhtiguhle Faculty, ful y adequate in number, and competent to impart instruction in all the rejiulnr and ornamental branches. The entire eiocntes of a hoarding pupil per term of '21 weeks, will vary between 51" and J? according to llie grade of regular studies punned, nud the number of orna mental branches taken Application lorliirther information or for niluiishioii, msv be made to the iindeoiiiued, either personally or by letter. P. It Wl LHKK, Pres't. JV II. jo scrtanan or sectional prejudice nre allowed to wound the Ice 1 1 tins, or disturb the hurmonv of those who here nook instruction. auul.r) V. Cin. (iaa. ooi,i:k i 1:11 a li: aoaui:.my, da vi o.n, ohio. rMIK next session of this Inhibition will commence on J Monday, Ihe Will o August. I he course of instruction u extensive, embracing all llie common und higher Knglish branches, Latin, ti reek, French nml (erriian latiuuat!cn, V ocal and Instrumental Music, and Drawing nnd l auding. Application lor sdmiMHion, or information, miv tie made to the Principal, K. L. Uaiinkv, or to either of the under signed trustees. SVMI'KI. roiutr.ll, ItORMtT U. S I1E.11K, Kliw uti) W.Daviks, It. W. Sii:i:i,k, I) Pllll.ira, Hit 11 A It l) (iKEhlT. july'Jj twdiV iinv, ECLECTIC MEDICAL l.NKTUTTE, r.Vf7A.Y.177. 070. rllti next Kail and WinterCourso of Lectures com men ces in this Institution on llie first Monday in Novem ber, and continues lour months, which is immediately alter luccecded by the Spring and Summer Sesmon, which also continues four mouths, A gratuitous preliminary courie commences on the first Mouthy in October, and continues one iiiouui. FACULTY. Tickets. D. L. Hill, M. D., Anatomy, and Operative Surgery, 510 00 L. K. Jones, M. I)., Materia Modica, The rape u lies, and llotanv, 10 (Nl J II Oliver.' M D.Chemistrv and Pharmacy. . Hi (HI W. Heiicli, M. D.. Surgery and Clinical Medicine, - 1U UU A. H. Ilalrnlge, M. D., Obstetrics and Disuuies of Women and Children, ... 10 00 J. K. Huchniian, M. I), Phyiiolngy. Institutes of. Medicine and Medical Jurisprudence, - - 10 00 T. V. Morrow, M, D,, Pathology, Theory and Practice of Medicine, 10 00 Matriculation 'Picket, 5.I I'senf Library, ft (radua-lion Fee, IO. Demonstrator's Ticket, '.V optional. One hundred dollars paid on or befure Ihe first Monday in JVo veinhcr next, will be received as payment in lull tor tho entire tuition of one student ihe Matriculation, Library, sod Dt inonslrator's Pecs excepted. Tim course of instruction embraces a full and thorough presentation nf the various departments of inadical science taught in tho leaning college of America, together with much additional milter, not imparted in any other institution, vis : recent and important discoveries in physiology bearing upon diagnom and practice j a more thorough and piactical system of Materia Mcdica and Pharmacy; and B reformed syilern nf practice, haocd upon extensive experience and scientific research. winch euables the practitioner belter to preserve the vital energies to discard llie use of mercurial medicines, nnd general depletion, and to treat with sncc ess many medicul and surgical cases, that bailies Ihe usual resources of medicine. Six or seven lectures and ex animations will tie given daily. Candidate! for graduation, in addition in Ihe preliminary timo nf study, must have at tended two rciiiilar collegiate courses of medical lectures, (the last o which must be in this Institute,) or one course alter one years' pnctice. The liif lilule was chartered in fV. The classes in attendance Upon the lectures have numliered as follows : llltd -ti.lll t llil-7, IIH7-U1, It is expected that in two or three years lis clasves will bo immng Ihe largeit m the United Stales. The collegiate edifice (corner of Court and Plum street.) mil Imi enlarged in HH'J, sufficient lor the reception of I" "lor Its Ml pupiU, Letters upon bu nines or soliciting information, mint be addrcsicd to the undersigned, port paid. iNoles of solvent Hanks, nf the States in which ihe students reside, will bo received 111 the payment of lues. Hoard may be obtaiued in Iho city at from l per week. T. V. MoltHOW, M. D , atij A jf .,(. Dean of the Faculty. For tlio Ohio State Ji-tirnul, Lenrrnl ( iims'i DMillcry M ssns. KniroKs : 1 have seen in both the Journal and Statesman, various allusiotia to a certain Ihttil-Ory, once owned by (ien. Lewis (' sb, al Detroit. If my memory is not murk at fault, (ien. Cass was tho reputed owner of a Distillery at lhat place, dow n to niioin ine year ivi, or furr aliout winch lime ho this city, recommending the nomination of a candidate 1 od it to a gentleman, now residing in the City of Co- for Governor, by thai party. A pHoviiivsT Invmtwknt. Mr. Aaron A Clark, of Portland, Me , who was unfortunately crowded I mm the whan into the river, and drowned, el the lato con 1I1 grit ion in Albany, took out a policy on his life for .o00( in New York, about two months since, also one for $'.ito0il, at a Huston ulliee, thu securing to j Ilia lamilv, consisting n a wife and four children, the , comfortable aunt of $7,000 at a cost uf less than gt'HI The above is an instance of the Item-fit arising from ihe system of Life Insurance which has of lale become so extensively resorted to. bee the sdvertise-ment of the Mutual Lift Inturnnrs Company, of New York, of which Mr. Chas. T. Wirt has received Iho agency for Ibis cily. Tint CoasTiTt'TtoitAi. Purron. The President of the United Htatcs, on enlerinji upon the duties of his oilier, is required to make oath as follows : " 1 do solemnly swear (or allirui) that 1 will faith fully executo the ollico of President n the United OlaieS, ailll Will, 10 ine ncm 01 oiy ei'iniy, prepcrve, protect and defend thu Constitution of the United 8lalcs." Tim P a kt v Pi ATioHat proposed by tho Lnoofocos to their candidate would require of llie President elect, an oalh something like this: 11 1 do solemnly swear lhat 1 will support Ihe doctrines of the Loco foco party, as declared 111 their late revelation at llalluuore." The former declares (Ien. Taylor's faith, the latter indicates llie practice of (ien. Cass. Wo iniiterslitod that Ihe Free 8oil" Convention held at Wilkesvtlle, Gallia county, on the Kith inat declined making noiiiiuaiinns, either for Congrcn llie Hiale LcirtsMuic, or lor county otlicera .Wrts lo. Itttgraph. The river is very low, and still has a dattntrtrd tendency. Larger boa Is ennT venture more, ' Nor liltle ones keep near shore. lumlnis, who converted it into a Hrcwery. That gen tleman can uoubllesa lurnisti the lacls, if he trill. An " Ol.ll 1 H HABITANT." A Frsnv Platiokh Here aw two planks from the Htill'ilo pUtl'orm, on which Mr. Van Huren and Mr. C. F. Adams are striving so hard to stand aidu by aide : 7'Ar.VrWr.irt War. ' It is due In tlie future lame, as well as tin present prosperity of Ibis great nation, that it lie triumph anil v siislniuetl "Mar- tin fan llurcn. The Mtitcan H'.ir Tho present war with Mexico is unconstitulinii.il in its origin, unjust in its character, and detestable in ils objects " Charles F..Id-sms. Iftbev did not hate each other loo cordially, Messrs. Van Ho re 11 and Adams could not look each oilier in the face without laughing at the ridiculous position they occupy before Ihe country. After this experi ment o tho " rree Hell party, we may expect bye. and live to see V nit for Foatr and John I. Unit stand ing upon the same plailoruis, if not hanging upon the same tree ! -ttiarir r. JKH I'l.llY. NILI U WAHK, Ar. JV VY SMI I II MoiiiiireH-ciiuiij nitoiin the ladies and gentlemen of Cohnnhns. and public generally, lhat ho has taken a room on I dub street, three doors soulh nf the ollire of the Colinuhiia liiNiirancM Com pany, where he will be prepared lo clean nnd repair Wsli Ilea, clocks, lime-pieces, Ve. lie Ins now on band ami intend keeping a constant supply of rich and faihienable Jew. eirv, com ruling 01 ni. in-..-i'mrniiii itniu.tni nrvt Pius, Plain and Set War limes. Set and Plain Finger Hnn;s, Hracelcts. t (wins. Pencils and hvva, Shirt Simla, Can! Canes, (odd and Siher Sc tai li s, .WAr, Abut, a superior lot ofJiher Ware, all nf which will be sold low fot cash. Please rail and examine the above stock, prices, Ac. IS. W. SMITH. BCpl'J ;illW. UtK KI P LOOK LOST. IOST bv the viilwcnbcr. on the I lib mat,, a small pocket J book.'nr wallet, roiitaunng a number of notes made payable to Ihe subscriber, amminiiiig lo up aids of Jf Hal, anil a note in favor of T. O Hns fur jf.Vt The wsllet was lost in Jackson tnwnhip. Fianklin county, betwern the widow Hoie s and mv rem'eure. A liberal row ard will be paid for Ihe rccntery of all of said papers, iiplbilww. JOHN (I. NLTF. I'ltOt I. A M TIO. TIIK quililied electors of rraiiklm c ounlvare hereby no. illicit to meet on the second Tuesday of October next. Iiein the lllthd iv of said month, in the several election districts in said county, at Ihetnoul places of tuddinu elections, or al such places aa the ttiwnhip truiecs shall direct, and ni sticii places in inn several wiirds in Ibueilv nl Columbus as Iho City Council shall designate, nud proceed according to law to vole lorn Governor of the Sttto of Ohio 1 one Hepresentalive 111 the Unniiresi of Ihe I mini Status, for the enmities of Franklin, Delaware and Licking ; one Senator in represent inn counties ot f rank tin nml Delaware m the Stale Lejinlalurn i one Itepresriitalive in the Stale Legisls-lure for the county ol Franklin, nnd one lor the counties ol Franklin and Delaware a Prosecuting Attorney a County Surveyor, and oue Poor House Director, for Iho county if Franklin. And iho Trustees nf the several townships are hereby no- tilled to select lliuir respective apportioruneiit if Jurors, ami return the same to the Clerk o the Court of Common I'leas nf said county ol r rauklin, with tlie poll books uf said election, lo w it : Moiitiomcryr. 33 Plain A Norwich S llniolton .... tt Hleiiibm A I trow n 1 Madison H Sharon A I'ranMiu.. ( Trtiro fi Clinton i I'raine 3 Mdllm 9 Perry t Jkson 4 Jellervon 4 Washinuloiu, ,1 Pleasant... 4 (iiveu under mv band, at mv oltice, in ihe citv of Colum bus, this lUb day of September, lilbl. in the I'dh year of Ihe Stale, and of the ludeiHiiltleiicc of the I niled States, tho 7.W. JOH N liii MIAM, st-pld. Slientf uf Fr.iukliii county. OAKLAND I I: MALL NLMINAIIY, IIIU.SllOKlH till. mini. HI. Fall seKion of this Institution ill commence on JL Mondnv . 'i'lth of SeptemlMT. Fr lerms, V c , df c, see the InM Catalogue, which mat be had at the h.iokMnre nf II. Hi ley Co., t olmubna. or ot the ffimipd at llills-oormigh Jl)x Mel) MTHLS, Principal, HilNhorongh, Sept. II '.'tdA.lw. HTAKLIM. M KDICAL COLLI iiE. TIIK, annual couro ot Lectures will commence on the fir l Wednesday in Novcuilier next, and continue sixteen week". Too preliminary con ran will rotntnence on the first Wednesday in October, during which mouth thora will lie three lectures daily. In October the following subjects will lie taught : Microscopical Aiialemv Prof Judkiua. Minor Surgery I'ruf. Howard. Inamly I'rol. Smith. I'oiious Prof. Carter. IVsical Diagnosis Prof, Uutterfield. llotanv I'nd'. Merrick. This course is free, and it I hoped as minv students as possible will avail themselves of its advantages. ' FACULTY. Il. nry II. Childa. M. D., Prof, of Obstetrics and Diseases nf W omen 11ml Children. John Hullcrtield, M. D., Prof, nf the Practice of Medicine. Ilirhanl I.. Ifonanl, M. D.. Prol. of Surgerv. Jcskc P. Judkms, M. 1),, Prof, ol tienenil and Hpecial An. atomy. Sninuel M. Smith. M. D Prnf.nf Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Medical Jurisprudence. Pranria Carter, M. D., Prof, of Physiology and tJeneral Pathology, Frederick Merrirk. M. D.. Prof, nf Chemistry & Botany. Norman liay, M. 1)., Heninnstrator of Aiialomy. FF.F.S. Lectures, - . - J.'tfi (XI Mmriculation, $3 00 (irailualion, . .'0 IN) Directing Ticket, 0 UU IiihhI board from $1,60 to N.'.ihi per week. JUtl ttl 1 1 l.tir ir.1.11, aiig7. Dean of the Faculty, Mi-.DicAL (lli:(;i: or omo. nHF. Facully, soliciloua nl giving ntudenls every oppor-X tiniHv of instruction, will commence Lectures 11 the 1st MONDAY in OcIoImt, both in the College ami Hospital. On the 1st MONDAY la November the established Collegiate course commences, ami terminates 1st March. JOHN S. SHOTWKI.L. M. D . Anatomy. JOHN Lot KK, M D,Chumtry. H. D. MUSSI Y, M. D , Surgery. L. II. LAWSON.M.D, Materia Mcdica and Cenersl Pa-lliology.M. II WHIOHT, M. I)., Obstetrics ami inseasesoi wo men and Children. JOHN P. HAHKISON, IM. P., Theory and I'ractica 01 Medicine, On Hie 1st MONDAY in Or tuber, the Disserting Hnnnis will Im one nod under the direction of the Prnl'cnnr of An Tbelollottiiiggei.lleuieiicoui.titutetlieTfl,,,,t,r. "ud Assistant, JOHN DAN IS, M. D., Deinoa Terms: Matriculation $.; HoRpilal Dissecting Tick-cl S'lUt Slid e.veli Professor 's Tn kct 'l.i. JOHN P. ll.MUilSO.N.Deaii. ju!y:tl $,IX' Cin.Cas. K LM YON COLLIKii:. rTHF. Winter Term ol Ibis limiiiulioti opens nn Tlinrs. X day, Sept, 'J Faenllv of Vila liwv. S. A. Hronson. D D . President, and Professor of Moral nnd Intellectual Phi1pliv. Hev. J. T. Hrooke, D. D.. Piob-sor of lihetoric. Itev. Alet.F. Dobb, A.M., l'rb..Mir of the Latin and (ireok languages, F. C. liota, A. M., Professor of M.tMieniaIics nud Natural Philosophy. II. L. Thrall. M. D., Professor of Chcliiiilry, Mineralogy and ticolngv Hev. N. lUdger, A. M., Principal of the Preparatory Do partmenl. Further iiiformalion may be had by appt) ing to the Presi-dent at liamhufr, Kimi co , l lino. sepl 1. HYAVN KID SIIOLS. NOTHFR bd je-t arm eil bv eprea. including liijlit eolnrnl HI Sh INS, lor Mines' ami children. j.im:i. H. COWLI.i 6l CO. er I HANkLIN noi m rrri III 1 Farmer! known 11" Ammmn Ihutr." jjf J TIH', aulwentier would renpnel fully inform the traveling public lhat he h is rented ll.n above aland, and Is prepared lo ncroinuiodnle lli who ma) fivor him with a nil, sasuriliJ tlieni lliai ins nusi eiioria w 111 im- i-vtihi render tliem comlorluble. I ln rooniw are eonimodionn, nun nre supplied with new and tinltihln furniture for comfort and otmvenieiice. The Traveler inav ret asnrefl that ho will always find a home " at the " Franklin House.'' I!. MONT JOMLTY. rortsinoulb.O.. Sept. L)$:w frihuiieiV Clip-vr. MA III ETTA COLUx;K. THK Fall term of Una Institution opeua itn Wednesdar, Sept. ''7th. in thu Colleiriiite und Scieniific IV.inH.nt'. and m Wednesday. Sept. Lith, iu the Academic Deourt' ment. I hu fullimimr trciitlcmnu coiistilule tlm Fiimliv Henry Smith. I) U I'rexideiit. mid l'ri.l.a.F nl' M.,,.,1 and iiielleetual philosophy. , " "omncK. iw. a., i roiessor ol mo Latin and tircelt Lnngu.ii'cH and Liter-nun-.. Km el W;ird At.,lr..wu t a P.ru-.. r i..ik i:. and Natural l'tnb,sophy.' ' irani IIiiil' ham. l X ti,r..,.. ,,r ei,n,i,. m.... alogy mid Ideology. ' " Saiuue Mi.well. M. A., Principal of Iho Academy. A van H. VVuslihiirn, It. A., Tutor and Librarian. J tin iriHtllUIIOII IS ill tOH,0.iomi nl' . ul..i.l.l ..,) A.tnl.. sive Philoaoplncnl Apparatua.nf a clinice colleclion of Mm-eralogical specimens, ot Libraries, embracing more than bOOU volumes, nml is fully prepared to giv0 u thorough edit-ration in every branch of collegiate itudy. The Suciildic course ilt:sigiieit for those w ho propose to devote thcnm-lves to husineas pursuits, occupies three years, and embraces with thu exception of the languages, all tho studies of ihe College coume. Tho measure of success winch has thus far attended nn effort, 111 which tho corporation is engaged mui-e urn IMIIOB 01 lie IliNllUlIIOn, IB BUCI) SN 10 IIUCO it upon a broad und firm foundation. Students bavins; in the Christian m:tllstrv. can receive, ercnrdimr to th number of applicants, tho whole era major part of their tu-ition as a gratuity. Charges for tuition in the Collegiate arid Scientific departments, 25 per vwar : in tho Academic from jKllo 7. nerterm ol I I ur..lH fl'i.. ..... t...,i all oxponsus. save clotbiiig and books, nued not eicsed ilOO per year. w In respect to moral influence, it is h..lid nn ..r. ni can be loutid for tho euucation of the young. Further information mav be had bv niioluimr tn tl. lrn.i. dent, or to Douglass Pmnaiii,Ks(j., lluriner, Secretary of Ilia Marietta, Sep. 11 wd&3ww. SIIIOHIFF nnd Mnsttir t'oinmisKiner Hnlc. In pursuance to an order of the court of common picas of the county uf Friutklis.aiid State of Ohio, mado in u certain cause therein pending, wherein I'vrena Wfiileheod is complainant, and John McMullen and others are renpon-dents. I shal! oiler for tale at Hie door of the court Iioiiho il said l-raiiklin counlv. on Iho dnv nt'( titotur kpo .. tweeii llm hours of 1(1 o'clock, A- M.,und 4 o'clock. P.'m., uie loiiowiug UescritMid real oMate, aituate in the county of Ftaiiklin, anil Stale of Mho, wit: A part of in-lot iiiim-Iwr one hundred and fifty-seven, in the town of oithn.g-ton, in said county, viz :'beinu two-lhirda of tlm urnio.d f said in-lot, being the part of the samo taking the whole width of said in lot on Main street, in said town of or-tliiiigton, and running in depth west two-thirds of ihe distance of said lot. except so much of said nrcmisea wu conveyed by said John McMullen lo said I'vrena Whitehead, to wit: one-third of iu-lot number ono hundred nnd tiny, seven, (C7, in the town of Worthington aforesaid, begin, mng at the northeast corner of said lot, thence running win lb four rods on Main street, thence west through tho centre ol the lot ten roils, thence north fournKls to A. Ktl-bourne's lot, thence east lo the place of beginning. Appraised at $ U'Ai. Tonus cash. JOHN OIIAIIAM, Sheriff; siid Special Master Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs. fco .U7. SIILKIIF nud Mn-tcr Coiiiniifsioner'a Nh. Hy virtue of un interlocutory decree made bv the court of common pleas of Franklin county, Slate of Ohio, nt May " ereoi, n. i, ioio, in a certain cause ttierein pending, wherein Justin Morrison is complainant, and Corgo .iuBa m uen iiuiini, i snap oner lor sale III tlie iloor ot the court house of said comity , on the tM day of Oct fiber next, between the hours of III o'clock, A. M . and 4 o'clock, P. M., the following described real estile.aitualo iu the county of Franklin nod State of Ohm, to wit : A part of half section?, tnwnrdiip.'i, range '12. Itefugee tract, hounded as follows : biiitiiimg in ihe south hue ol snnl hull section I t', poles east of High street, in tho city of Cnluinlnis, thenco east with said half section line )(H'poles nnd III links to a stone j thence north '.ty poles lo a post ; thence west I Pi poles nnd IU link lo a poM j thence south ii degree, east ;t;t poles and II finks to the hcgiuiiinir. containing twenty-two 7y.HK) nf-res, ,.ecpling six acres oil' the wesi end which was conveyed ov l.eorge hrnuhs nud wile to Daniel Kswine, by deed, dated OctolK-r 27, IU l.t. ihus leavit.g Iti ly.)acrtjs. Appraised at IflJ per acre. Terms cash JOHN liUAHAM, Sheriir, hml Special Ma tor Commissioner. Sept. 1). Prer. fee JdJHJ. 0III:KII'F mid Muolcr oinniKKloner's Kale, O Hy virtue of an interlocutory decree made by the court of coir n pleas of Franklin county, State ofOhio, jn a certain cause therein nemling. wherein Nullum Jenkins is complainant, and JneUon Hiddle and others nre dch-nd nuts, 1 ah ill olli-r for sale at the door of the court house ol said Franklin county, on the '1-iA day of Orloher next between the hours nf 1(1 o'clock, A. M.,aiid I o'clock, P. M,, ihe following dcscrilM-d real estate, situate in eanl county of Franklin, and Slate of Ohio, to wit : In-lot in Ihe ton n of Fraukliiilou, iiiimber one hundred and sitlvsix, ( No. 1m!. Also, the in lot in said town of Franklinton number one hundred andnxty-sevcii fNo. 1(17.) as the aame i numbered and designated on Ihe reconled plat id' said town. Appraised as follows: In lot No. h-'Jiit y.jOj in-lot Nn. lt,7 w.t i'.UJ. Terms cash. JOHN OKAllAM. Sheriff, nnd Sort: i d M uter Coiiiiiuasinnr. pt. 9. Prs fee5J.. OIlKltll'F nnd .1iiktir Commissioner's Nnle. O Hy virtue nl an interlocutory decree made bv the court of common picas nf Franklin county. Slate of Ohio, at the July term thereof. A D., IH.7, in a certain cause therein ponding, wherein Lyric Starling is complainant, and (ieorgo rtrauss ami ollieis are respondent a. I s II oiler tor ml at the door of the court house of stud Franklin county, nn iho ""7 .-i"iwir next, iiiuwceil llie Iioiirs (I in o clock, A. M ,and o'clock, P M., the follow ing described n-al estate, silunle in the county of Franklin, and Stite of Ohio, to wit : In-lot in the city of Cnlumhua numlier Iwo hundred ami lorry-seven, (.vi. . as the same is numbered and do-signaled on the recorded pi it of said cily 'Perms cash. Appraised at ..UOO. JOHN CUAH M, Sheriff, and Special Muster Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs. fee 5J.is. SimtlFF nnd Muster CommisMoner's NhIp. Hy virtue of on interlocutory decree made bv the court of common pleas of Franklin counlv. State of Ohm. t tt. July lerm thereoi; A. D., Itil7, in a certain cause therein iiendmg, wherein Lyne Starling is complainant and Robert Hutchcr is defemlxul, 1 ahsfl otf-r for sale st Hie door nl'thn court house nf siid roiinty, on the 2.W day of October neil, lielween the liouis of Ml o'clock, a M., am) 4 o'clock P.' M.. the following described real estate, situate in the county of Franklin, aud State of Ohio, in wit: In-lot in the citv of Columbus number four hundred and seventy-two, 'U ) JIH1N liHAHAM, Sheriff, Special .Mastet Commissioner. Sept. 9. Prs fee 51,117. SIILKII F nnd Muster Commissioner's Nnln. In pursuance to nn rderol Hie court of common pleas of Franklin county, Ohio, made in a ceriais caue thriein pending, wherein ( imlavus Swan is complainant, and Charles r . aenencft is oerenoini, i snsii oiler lor sale at ihe door of the eourl houae of aaid county, on the 'ikl day nf October aext. lielween the hours nf Hi o'clock, A. M., ami 4 o'clock, P.M., the following described real estate, situate in the county a' Franklin, and Siate of Ohio, low it : In lot in Ihn city of Columbus number sevenly-au, (No.)',) as the aame is numoereo ami iiesitin aleil on the recorded plat of said cily. Appraised at :M. Term cash. JOHN OIUHAM. Sheriff, and Siiecial Master Commissioner. Seet 9. Pre. fee $1 117. S" HKRIFF'S KAI.K.-HM.7uVofVw"riiorH faVt lev la. iatued from the court of common pleas of Franklin county, to me directed. I shall oflrr for sale at the door of Ihe eourl house of said Franklin counlv, Stale of Ohio, on the ittd dav of October liev,t betwern the hours ol 10 o'clock, A. M.. and 1 o'clock. P. M , thu fnllowinndescritH d real estate, situate in said Franklin counlv, and State of Ohio, to wit: In-lot No. !U. in the (own of Franklinton, known and designated aa stu b on Iho reconled plat of said town. Levied upon as the prowwly of Win. II Howe, at the suit uf Jacob Swsrtx. Apprised nt C.'iNI. Termscaxli. JOHN tiltAHA.M, Sheriff. Sept, 9. Prs. fee 5 ! ,V2. OlIFJUFFM NALK.-Hy virtue of a writ of It t. t O lev. la., iHiind Irom the court of common pleaa of Frank lin county to inn directed, I shall offer lor sale at Ihe dor of llie court house of said rouniv, nn the 2. Id day uf Or to. lrr next, bi'lween llie hours ol 111 o'clock, A. M!, and to', clock, P. M., Ihe following described real estate, situate m Ihe county of Franklin, Slide of Ohio, lo wit : the east one-third of m lot iu Ihe town of Franklinton numlier eighty line. (III.) as Ihe same is numliered anddeaif oated upon Ihe recorded id it of said town, levied upon aa the pttuierty of John Caldwell, at the suit of J ph Helrnir k. ailiniiustrs- lor of I . me. Hclunck, dee d. Apnraised nl y UK) S,,,'1:t' JUli t,ltH'il. Sheriff. Sai.k of ki:ai. rsTATiruitDi;iroF COI KT. Oil Ihe lk day of Octolter, A D , IlilJf, between the hour of III nnd 4 o'clock, at the door of the Court House in tbn city of Columbus, Franklin counlv. u., will be sold to llm highest bidder Ihn following real estate, a Hie projMTly ol John Hirdiop, Adam llishop and Samuel Hishop. to wit; the west half of Ihe south east qusrter of .,.. .... im, mm rant'e ii. u oein ine tnmn laud that waa conveyed bv Hamuel Hishnpand wile to John Hodinp, on the Mth of Januarv. HU, bv deed, reconled in Itook In, p:ige l.lii. 7, aiibjicl to Ihe ilower of Sarah Hulmp, which hasln-enassiuneit, Apprmicdal jti'l per aeie. 'Perms oiie thnd cash, oue-lhinl in one year, ami one-third in two V ears from dale, with in I crest un deterred navmnuta 1'r.nn day nf sale, to he secured by uiorigage upon llie premises. P'-!J ' W. W. KII.F., Adm'r. ci:ni; a ikim: inhi'iti ti: rlHF. Full lerm of Una Seminary will open on the Ifth oj L Ocl., for the reception of boardimr nnd dav mini la. Tim course embraces all the studies pursued in our highest Sum mane, wim sunaiiie rniiotnphical apparatus lo illustrate the m-tniction in natural science. The plan of familiar lures nnd nral initrucnon. aoiurrrtalul m ihailiiri.nn of the Hlind. Is, to a limited extent, introduced tiers. I kit Mi For Hoard and Tuition g :u per vear. W. CIIAPIN, Principal, Late Sup't of the Ohio li... for the Blind, tieneva, N. Y .Sept. 1,1 d't wtoetlii. ADMINISTI1 .lTOKH nhK. IN pursuance to an order of ihe court of common pleas of Franklin county, State of Ohio, I ahall offer for sale nn tho "Md d.iv ot October next. Ivelween the hours of ID clock. A. M.. and o'clock. P. M .on the premises, the follow mg tle,erded real eolate, situate in the county of Franklin, ami tili- ol Ohm, to it : In-lot in the tow n of Frank lintou, No. ."fhi. Apjoaised at Terms eih. JOSF.PU K. Ol NO, sepf. Iww Adm'r of Jane WigdoU, dee'd. NLW PAU.AMI winti:u t;iNMN. ' W"' "r" lM,,"1, 'l,,t' n'idileirable ii-aorlineiil of V fre-h Fall IohmIb al our old stand, and will cuntinun to rer eive daily nml weekly secessions to our stock during the fill senaon. One of ihe firm residing in New York. w liall at nil lime lw supplied with the newest imtmrtaluma. und slvlcs "I Onnda.holh FOKI.HiN AM) DtDTIC. mid w ill endeavor to aell them as low as they cai lie bad Fast in like qu intttv, Weitern Merc,lni y)iiing this citv for the purehse o, tiooda.are respoetSdl y mviled toe ill Hid eximioe our stock. Hl.( HI.V A SIMPSON. aulT No. II, Pearl si., Cincinnati, Ohm,